New polarimetric coherence parameter for built‐up areas in PolSAR imagery

2018 ◽  
Vol 54 (3) ◽  
pp. 159-161 ◽  
Author(s):  
Qinghui Fan ◽  
Deliang Xiang ◽  
Chongyuan Fan
Keyword(s):  
2018 ◽  
Vol 8 (11) ◽  
pp. 2025 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wentao Dao ◽  
Chunhao Liang ◽  
Fei Wang ◽  
Yangjian Cai ◽  
Bernhard J. Hoenders

Based on the extended Huygens-Fresnel (eHF) principle, approximate analytical expressions for the spectral density of nonuniformly correlated (NUC) beams are derived with the help of discrete model decompositions. The beams are propagating along horizontal paths through an anisotropic turbulent medium. Based on the derived formula, the influence of the anisotropic turbulence (anisotropy factors, structure parameters) on the evolution of the average intensity, the shift of the intensity maxima and the power-in-the-bucket (PIB) are investigated in detail through numerical examples. It is found that the lateral shifting of the intensity maxima is closely related to the anisotropy factors and the strength of turbulence. Our results also reveal that, in the case of weak turbulence, the beam profile can retain the feature of local intensity sharpness, but this feature degenerates quickly if the strength of the turbulence increases. The value of PIB of the NUC beams can be even higher than that of Gaussian beams by appropriately controlling the coherence parameter in the weak turbulence regime. This feature makes the NUC beams useful for free-space communication.


2019 ◽  
Vol 25 (2) ◽  
pp. 117-137
Author(s):  
Tetiana Krysanova ◽  
Iryna Shevchenko

This study of the psycholinguistic properties of negative emotions in the English cinematic feature discourse focuses on the establishment of their intersemiosis – the simultaneous multimodal construction of emotional meanings by means of heterogeneous sign systems. The means of meaning construction in the cinematic discourse include linguistic, non-linguistic (prosody, kinesics, etc.) and extra-linguistic (music and kineikonic means), and different modes – acoustic and visual channels for transmitting meanings. The main psycholinguistic properties of cinematic emotions are their inextricable connection with the physiological processes, rootedness in the common human embodied experience, motivational basis; emotions are read as the result of an assessment of the satisfaction degree of individuals’ needs. The construction of emotional meanings in the cinematic discourse is the result of the interaction between the real world of the film makers and the imaginary world of the action. In constructing negative emotional meanings in general and emotions of fear and anger, in particular, the collective author of the cinematic discourse uses different semiotic codes in a parity or non-parity way. In the first case, heterogeneous semiotic codes both serve to denote fear or anger, while in the second, advantage is given to one of heterogeneous codes – linguistic, non- linguistic, and extra-linguistic. Consequently, this leads to the domination of one of the modes of transmitting meanings to the collective viewer – acoustic or visual. According to the coherence parameter of the emotional meaning embodied by various means of the semiosis of fear or anger, individual episodes of the English cinematic feature discourse are either congruent or non-congruent. Being congruent, different codes simultaneously transmit the same emotional meaning; being incongruent, heterogeneous semiotic codes actualize different emotional meanings, which leads to higher expressiveness of such emotions and their more effective influence on the viewer.


2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (4) ◽  
pp. 103
Author(s):  
Sören Podschuweit ◽  
Sascha Bernholt

Conceptual knowledge is a crucial tool for students to understand scientific phenomena. Knowledge about the structure and function of mental concepts potentially helps science educators to foster the acquisition of this tool. Specifically, the coherence of students’ mental concepts is an intensely discussed issue within the related conceptual change discourse. While former discussions focused on the question of whether these conceptions are coherent or not, recent approaches describe them as dynamic systems behaving more or less coherently in different situations. In this contribution, we captured this dynamic behavior of individual concepts by means of network analysis. Transcribed video data of 16 pairs of students working on four subsequent experiments on energy were transformed into weighted networks, which in turn were characterized by standardized coherence parameters. These coherence parameters and more basic network parameters were correlated with students’ pre-post scores of a multiple-choice test on the energy concept. We found that the coherence parameter is significantly related to the students’ test scores. Even more intense relations are indicated if networks are calculated solely based on conceptual key terms. Implications as well as methodological constraints of this approach are discussed.


2014 ◽  
Vol 2014 ◽  
pp. 1-12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mukesh Gupta ◽  
Randall K. Scharien ◽  
David G. Barber

Estimates of the relationships between geophysical variables and microwave backscatter/emission are important for the evaluation of atmosphere-ocean interaction, as well as energy, and mass transfer across this interface. We evaluate ship-based passive microwave brightness temperatures Tb at 37 and 89 GHz and active polarimetric backscatter at 5.5 GHz (C-band), as these relate to buoy-derived ocean wave parameters for distinct wave regimes in the southern Beaufort Sea. Microwave emission and backscatter are shown to be sensitive to the ocean surface physical roughness as defined by the significant wave height Hm0, compared to wind speed. The Tb shows significant correlation with Hm0, with the strongest correlation for the H-polarization channel at 37 and 89 GHz. Active co-γco and cross-γcross polarization ratios at 40° incidence angle are associated with Hm0, with the γco increase proportional to Hm0. The polarimetric coherence parameter ρVVHH at 20° also shows an inverse relationship with Hm0 because of an expected decorrelation of complex returns with greater surface roughness.


1978 ◽  
Vol 56 (12) ◽  
pp. 1539-1544 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. K. Gupta ◽  
K. Singh

This paper deals with the study of intensity distributions and the encircled energy in the Fraunhofer diffraction patterns formed by an optical system with a circular aperture afflicted with primary astigmatism under partially space coherent illumination. The besinc form of the correlation function has been assumed for the mutual coherence function. Computed results are presented graphically in the midfocal plane to illustrate the degrading effects of various amounts of astigmatism on the image quality for several values of the coherence parameter. Peak intensity as a function of coherence parameter is also plotted.


1993 ◽  
Vol 10 (3) ◽  
pp. 281-304 ◽  
Author(s):  
Petr Janata ◽  
Hellmuth Petsche

The generation and updating of expectancies is a crucial process for our understanding and appreciation of music. We present evidence that the dynamic process of musical expectancy can be studied by using several electroencephalographic (EEG) parameters such as amplitude or coherence in various frequency bands between 1.5 and 31.5 Hz. At specific electrodes (amplitude parameter) or electrode pairs (coherence parameter), values of these parameters depend on how an established musical context is completed, that is, if the expectancy generated by the context is violated, the pattern of the brain's electrical activity differs significantly from when the expectancy is fulfilled. The various parameters are also sensitive to the ease with which subjects classify a musical resolution. In our study, musically trained subjects heard repeated trials consisting of cadence primes in various major keys and inversions. Each cadence resolved either to the tonic, the relative minor, or a chord based on the tonic of the most distantly related major key. The three resolutions represented the "best," an "ambiguous," and "worst" possible fulfillments of the expectancy (resolution to the tonic) generated by the priming cadence. In a "response" condition, subjects expressed a yes/no judgment of how well the resolution matched their expectancy of the best possible resolution; in a "no response" condition, subjects were asked to make the same judgment but no overt response was required. Analyses of variance snowed that reaction times, response accuracies, and some EEG parameters differed between the various resolutions. In addition to confirming that a form of expectancy operates in musical contexts, the results point towards the brain structures responsible for the processing of complex musical stimuli. In particular, EEG parameters changed not only at recording sites located above the auditory cortices, but also at sites above right frontal and parietal regions.


2016 ◽  
Vol 30 (05) ◽  
pp. 1650012 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dongxi Li ◽  
Bing Hu ◽  
Jia Wang ◽  
Yingchuan Jing ◽  
Fangmei Hou

Based on the two-dimensional (2D) neural map, we investigate the impacts of non-Gaussian colored noise on the firing activity of discrete system. Taking the coherence parameter R to measure the regularity of firing behavior, it is demonstrated that coherence parameter R has a pronounced minimum value with the noise intensity and the correlation time of non-Gaussian colored noise, which is the so-called phenomenon of coherence resonance (CR). Besides, the firing activity is not sensitive to the non-Gaussian parameter which determines the departure from the Gaussian distribution when the correlation time is large enough.


2013 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vladimir Farber ◽  
Elman Eduard ◽  
Yair Rivenson ◽  
Adrian Stern

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document