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Portland State University

Theses/Dissertations

Algorithms

1990

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Full-Text Articles in Engineering

Decomposition Of Measured Contours Into Geometric Features For Dimensional Inspection, Devaraj Rajkumar Nov 1990

Decomposition Of Measured Contours Into Geometric Features For Dimensional Inspection, Devaraj Rajkumar

Dissertations and Theses

Image processing systems used in Vision Assisted Dimensional Inspection usually output a set of boundary pixels representing the part edges. This boundary information must be divided into several subsets representing the various edges of the actual object, so that comparisons with the nominal part can be made.

The purpose of this project is to devise a method to divide the set of pixels obtained from the image processing system into subsets of pixels. Each of these subsets represent an edge in the contour of the actual object. This method must also detect transition points between the adjacent features. This project …


An Effective Cube Comparison Method For Discrete Spectral Transformations Of Logic Functions, Ingo SchäFer May 1990

An Effective Cube Comparison Method For Discrete Spectral Transformations Of Logic Functions, Ingo SchäFer

Dissertations and Theses

Spectral methods have been used for many applications in digital logic design, digital signal processing and telecommunications. In digital logic design they are implemented for testing of logical networks, multiplexer-based logic synthesis, signal processing, image processing and pattern analysis. New developments of more efficient algorithms for spectral transformations (Rademacher-Walsh, Generalized Reed-Muller, Adding, Arithmetic, multiple-valued Walsh and multiple-valued Generalized Reed- Muller) their implementation and applications will be described.


Investigation Of Techniques For High Speed Cmos Arbitrary Waveform Generation, Albert Henry Nehl Jan 1990

Investigation Of Techniques For High Speed Cmos Arbitrary Waveform Generation, Albert Henry Nehl

Dissertations and Theses

Today a growing number of applications in design engineering, production and environmental testing, and system service require specific analog waveforms and digital patterns. Such requirements are neither satisfactorily nor easily met by the use of standard function or single purpose, custom generators.

Traditional methods of waveform generation suffer from undesirable complexity or mediocre performance and are otherwise limited. For the majority of arbitrary waveform generation applications, including medical engineering, modal analysis and electronic engineering, direct digital synthesis techniques are satisfactory. Direct digital synthesis, based generally on periodic retrieval of predetermined amplitude values, may be used to 2 generate such waveforms. …