• Documents
  • Authors
  • Tables
  • Log in
  • Sign up
  • MetaCart
  • DMCA
  • Donate

CiteSeerX logo

Advanced Search Include Citations

Tools

Sorted by:
Try your query at:
Semantic Scholar Scholar Academic
Google Bing DBLP
Results 1 - 10 of 37,676
Next 10 →

Inverse Acoustic and Electromagnetic Scattering Theory, Second Edition

by David Colton , 1998
"... Abstract. This paper is a survey of the inverse scattering problem for time-harmonic acoustic and electromagnetic waves at fixed frequency. We begin by a discussion of “weak scattering ” and Newton-type methods for solving the inverse scattering problem for acoustic waves, including a brief discussi ..."
Abstract - Cited by 1061 (45 self) - Add to MetaCart
discussion is a description of Kirsch’s factorization method for solving this problem. We then turn our attention to uniqueness and reconstruction algorithms for determining the support of an inhomogeneous, anisotropic media from acoustic far field data. Our survey is concluded by a brief discussion

Determining Optical Flow

by Berthold K. P. Horn, Brian G. Schunck - ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE , 1981
"... Optical flow cannot be computed locally, since only one independent measurement is available from the image sequence at a point, while the flow velocity has two components. A second constraint is needed. A method for finding the optical flow pattern is presented which assumes that the apparent veloc ..."
Abstract - Cited by 2404 (9 self) - Add to MetaCart
Optical flow cannot be computed locally, since only one independent measurement is available from the image sequence at a point, while the flow velocity has two components. A second constraint is needed. A method for finding the optical flow pattern is presented which assumes that the apparent

Multimarket Oligopoly: Strategic Substitutes and complements

by Jeremy I. Bulow, John D. Geanakoplos, Paul D. Kiemperer - JOURNAL OF POLITICAL ECONOMY
"... A firm’s actions in one market can change competitors’ strategies in a second market by affecting its own marginal costs in that other mar-ket. Whether the action provides costs or benefits in the second market depends on (a) whether it increases or decreases marginal costs in the second market and ..."
Abstract - Cited by 619 (10 self) - Add to MetaCart
A firm’s actions in one market can change competitors’ strategies in a second market by affecting its own marginal costs in that other mar-ket. Whether the action provides costs or benefits in the second market depends on (a) whether it increases or decreases marginal costs in the second market

The complexity of theorem-proving procedures

by Stephen A. Cook - IN STOC , 1971
"... It is shown that any recognition problem solved by a polynomial time-bounded nondeterministic Turing machine can be “reduced” to the problem of determining whether a given propositional formula is a tautology. Here “reduced ” means, roughly speaking, that the first problem can be solved deterministi ..."
Abstract - Cited by 1050 (5 self) - Add to MetaCart
deterministically in polynomial time provided an oracle is available for solving the second. From this notion of reducible, polynomial degrees of difficulty are defined, and it is shown that the problem of determining tautologyhood has the same polynomial degree as the problem of determining whether the first

Nonlinear total variation based noise removal algorithms

by Leonid I. Rudin, Stanley Osher, Emad Fatemi , 1992
"... A constrained optimization type of numerical algorithm for removing noise from images is presented. The total variation of the image is minimized subject to constraints involving the statistics of the noise. The constraints are imposed using Lagrange multipliers. The solution is obtained using the g ..."
Abstract - Cited by 2271 (51 self) - Add to MetaCart
the gradient-projection method. This amounts to solving a time dependent partial differential equation on a manifold determined by the constraints. As t--- ~ 0o the solution converges to a steady state which is the denoised image. The numerical algorithm is simple and relatively fast. The results appear

Unsupervised Models for Named Entity Classification

by Michael Collins, Yoram Singer - In Proceedings of the Joint SIGDAT Conference on Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing and Very Large Corpora , 1999
"... This paper discusses the use of unlabeled examples for the problem of named entity classification. A large number of rules is needed for coverage of the domain, suggesting that a fairly large number of labeled examples should be required to train a classifier. However, we show that the use of unlabe ..."
Abstract - Cited by 542 (4 self) - Add to MetaCart
of unlabeled data can reduce the requirements for supervision to just 7 simple “seed ” rules. The approach gains leverage from natural redundancy in the data: for many named-entity instances both the spelling of the name and the context in which it appears are sufficient to determine its type. We present two

Computer Vision

by Kusuma Kumari B. M , 1982
"... Driver inattention is one of the main causes of traffic accidents. Monitoring a driver to detect inattention is a complex problem that involves physiological and behavioral elements. Different approaches have been made, and among them Computer Vision has the potential of monitoring the person behind ..."
Abstract - Cited by 1041 (11 self) - Add to MetaCart
and tracked. In the second stage the facial features are extracted for further processing. In last stage the most crucial parameter is monitored which is eye’s status. In the last stage it is determined that whether the eyes are closed or open. On the basis of this result the warning is issued to the driver

Diagnosing multiple faults.

by Johan De Kleer , Brian C Williams - Artificial Intelligence, , 1987
"... Abstract Diagnostic tasks require determining the differences between a model of an artifact and the artifact itself. The differences between the manifested behavior of the artifact and the predicted behavior of the model guide the search for the differences between the artifact and its model. The ..."
Abstract - Cited by 808 (62 self) - Add to MetaCart
Abstract Diagnostic tasks require determining the differences between a model of an artifact and the artifact itself. The differences between the manifested behavior of the artifact and the predicted behavior of the model guide the search for the differences between the artifact and its model

Cluster Ensembles - A Knowledge Reuse Framework for Combining Multiple Partitions

by Alexander Strehl, Joydeep Ghosh, Claire Cardie - Journal of Machine Learning Research , 2002
"... This paper introduces the problem of combining multiple partitionings of a set of objects into a single consolidated clustering without accessing the features or algorithms that determined these partitionings. We first identify several application scenarios for the resultant 'knowledge reuse&ap ..."
Abstract - Cited by 603 (20 self) - Add to MetaCart
(consensus functions). The first combiner induces a similarity measure from the partitionings and then reclusters the objects. The second combiner is based on hypergraph partitioning. The third one collapses groups of clusters into meta-clusters which then compete for each object to determine the combined

An affine invariant interest point detector

by Krystian Mikolajczyk, Cordelia Schmid - In Proceedings of the 7th European Conference on Computer Vision , 2002
"... Abstract. This paper presents a novel approach for detecting affine invariant interest points. Our method can deal with significant affine transformations including large scale changes. Such transformations introduce significant changes in the point location as well as in the scale and the shape of ..."
Abstract - Cited by 1467 (55 self) - Add to MetaCart
of the neighbourhood of an interest point. Our approach allows to solve for these problems simultaneously. It is based on three key ideas: 1) The second moment matrix computed in a point can be used to normalize a region in an affine invariant way (skew and stretch). 2) The scale of the local structure is indicated
Next 10 →
Results 1 - 10 of 37,676
Powered by: Apache Solr
  • About CiteSeerX
  • Submit and Index Documents
  • Privacy Policy
  • Help
  • Data
  • Source
  • Contact Us

Developed at and hosted by The College of Information Sciences and Technology

© 2007-2019 The Pennsylvania State University