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Terrace-Based Food Counting And Segmentation, Huu-Thanh Nguyen, Chong-Wah Ngo Feb 2021

Terrace-Based Food Counting And Segmentation, Huu-Thanh Nguyen, Chong-Wah Ngo

Research Collection School Of Computing and Information Systems

This paper represents object instance as a terrace, where the height of terrace corresponds to object attention while the evolution of layers from peak to sea level represents the complexity in drawing the finer boundary of an object. A multitask neural network is presented to learn the terrace representation. The attention of terrace is leveraged for instance counting, and the layers provide prior for easy-to-hard pathway of progressive instance segmentation. We study the model for counting and segmentation for a variety of food instances, ranging from Chinese, Japanese to Western food. This paper presents how the terrace model deals with …


Adaptive In-Network Processing For Bandwidth And Energy Constrained Mission-Oriented Multi-Hop Wireless Networks, Sharanya Eswaran, James Edwards, Archan Misra, Thomas La Porta Sep 2012

Adaptive In-Network Processing For Bandwidth And Energy Constrained Mission-Oriented Multi-Hop Wireless Networks, Sharanya Eswaran, James Edwards, Archan Misra, Thomas La Porta

Research Collection School Of Computing and Information Systems

In-network processing, involving operations such as filtering, compression and fusion, is a technique widely used in wireless sensor and ad hoc networks for reducing the communication overhead. In many tactical stream-oriented applications, especially in military scenarios, both link bandwidth and node energy are critically constrained resources. For such applications, in-network processing itself imposes non-negligible computing cost. In this work, we have developed a unified, utility-based closed-loop control framework that permits distributed convergence to both a) the optimal level of compression performed by a forwarding node on streams, and b) the best set of nodes where the operators of the stream …


Making Sharing Pervasive: Ubiquitous Computing For Shared Note Taking, James A. Landay, Richard C. Davis Jan 1999

Making Sharing Pervasive: Ubiquitous Computing For Shared Note Taking, James A. Landay, Richard C. Davis

Research Collection School Of Computing and Information Systems

As a variety of low-cost note-taking devices becomes pervasive, shared notes can help work groups better communicate ideas and information. To explore this idea further, we carried out three related case studies of how members of a large research group shared meeting notes. The group found value in combining personal notes and presentation slides with a single, unifying document, such as regular meeting minutes. The minutes provided structure when there were too many sources of notes. We used this insight in our design of NotePals, a note-sharing system with a lightweight process, an interface, and hardware that distinguish it from …