Recent
Patents on Computer Science
ISSN: 1874-4796 - Volume 1, 2008

Recent Patents on Computer
Science
Volume 1, Number 1, January 2008
Contents

Features for Heartbeat Sound Signal Normal and
Pathological Pp. 1-10
S.M. Debbal and F.Bereksi-Reguig
[Abstract] [Full
Text Article]
Wireless Sensor Networks: The Biggest Cross-Community
Design Exercise To-Date Pp. 9-25
Mischa Dohler
[Abstract] [Full
Text Article]
Computer Mediated Remote Touch Communication for Humans
and Animals Pp. 26-31
James K. Soon Teh and Adrian D. Cheok
[Abstract] [Full
Text Article]
Moving Object Detection in Spatial Domain using Background
Removal Techniques - State-of-Art Pp. 32-54
Shireen Y. Elhabian, Khaled M. El-Sayed and S. H. Ahmed
[Abstract] [Full
Text Article]
Automatically Annotating Images with Keywords: A Review
of Image Annotation Systems Pp. 55-68
Chih-Fong Tsai and Chihli Hung
[Abstract] [Full
Text Article]
Patent
Selections Pp. 69-75
Abstracts

[Back to top]
Features for Heartbeat Sound Signal Normal and Pathological
S.M. Debbal and F.Bereksi-Reguig
[Full
Text Article]
This paper is concerned with a synthesis study of the
fast Fourier transform (FFT) and the wavelet transform in
analysing the phonocardiogram signal (PCG). It bas been shown
that the wavelet transform provides enough features of the
PCG signals that will help clinics to obtain qualitative and
quantitative measurements of the time-frequency PCG signal
characteristics and consequently aid in diagnosis. Similarly,
it bas been shown that the frequency content of such a signal
can be determined by the FFT without difficulties. Abnormal
heartbeat sounds may contain, in addition to the first and
second sounds, S1 and S2, murmurs and aberrations caused by
different pathological conditions of the cardiovascular system.
[Back to top]
Wireless Sensor Networks: The Biggest Cross-Community
Design Exercise To-Date
Mischa Dohler
[Full
Text Article]
Within academia, wireless sensor networks have witnessed a
tremendous upsurge in the last decade, which is mainly attributed
to their unprecedented operating conditions and hence unlimited
research challenges. Within industry, the projected business
opportunities are huge with, e.g. according to Frost &
Sullivan, an expected market size of approximately $2b by
2012 at a compound annual growth rate of 41.9%, therefore
causing the interest in this technology to augment dramatically.
Due to the unique design constraints, however, none of the
grand communities - such as computing, telecommunications,
physics, biology, etc. - can make such systems work efficiently
on their own. The largest cross-community design exercise
to-date is hence well underway which is well reflected in
the nature of the intellectual property pools created in the
past years. The aim of this paper is to expose and discuss
a few early milestone as well as latest IT and telecommunications
patents in this vibrant area.
[Back to top]
Computer Mediated Remote Touch Communication for Humans
and Animals
James K. Soon Teh and Adrian D. Cheok
[Full
Text Article]
Touch-based remote communication is a relatively new field
of research. Traditionally, remote communication emphasizes
on voice communication. Recently, with the proliferation of
the IT sector, video communication is increasingly being used
for remote communication. Communication based on touch is
especially important for humans and animals to communicate
remotely. As humans become increasingly busy at work or away
from home, pets are increasingly neglected. Methodologies
need to be developed to enable humans to assure their pets
and keep in contact with them. Such systems should not only
allow humans to see their pets, but also to allow pets to
feel the presence of the owner. Patents reviewed here suggest
inventions that attempt to bridge this gap, or have methods
that can be used to achieve a better remote touch communication
for humans and animals.
[Back to top]
Moving Object Detection in Spatial Domain using Background
Removal Techniques - State-of-Art
Shireen Y. Elhabian, Khaled M. El-Sayed and S. H. Ahmed
[Full
Text Article]
Identifying moving objects is a critical task for many computer
vision applications; it provides a classification of the pixels
into either foreground or background. A common approach used
to achieve such classification is background removal. Even
though there exist numerous of background removal algorithms
in the literature, most of them follow a simple flow diagram,
passing through four major steps, which are pre-processing,
background modelling, foreground detection and data validation.
In this paper, we survey many existing schemes in the literature
of background removal, surveying the common pre-processing
algorithms used in different situations, presenting different
background models, and the most commonly used ways to update
such models and how they can be initialized. We also survey
how to measure the performance of any moving object detection
algorithm, whether the ground truth data is available or not,
presenting performance metrics commonly used in both cases.
[Back to top]
Automatically Annotating Images with Keywords: A Review
of Image Annotation Systems
Chih-Fong Tsai and Chihli Hung
[Full
Text Article]
The explosive growth of image data leads to the research and
development of Content-Based Image Retrieval (CBIR) systems.
CBIR systems extract and retrieve images by their low-level
features, such as color, texture, and shape. However, these
visual contents do not allow users to query images by semantic
meanings. Image annotation systems, a solution to solve the
inadequacy of CBIR systems, aim at automatically annotating
image with some controlled keywords. Machine learning techniques
are used to develop the image annotation systems to map the
low-level (visual) features to high-level concepts or semantics.
This paper reviews 50 image annotation systems using supervised
machine learning techniques to annotate images for image retrieval.
Future research issues are provided.
|