198 research outputs found

    Implementation and Validation of Video Stabilization using Simulink

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    A fast video stabilization technique based on Gray-coded bit-plane (GCBP) matching for translational motion is implemented and tested using various image sequences. This technique performs motion estimation using GCBP of image sequences which greatly reduces the computational load. In order to further improve computational efficiency, the three-step search (TSS) is used along with GCBP matching to perform a competent search during correlation measure calculation. The entire technique has been implemented in Simulink to perform in real-time

    Detection of Airport Runway Edges using Line Detection Techniques

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    Airport runway detection is a vital aspect for both military and commercial applications. An algorithm to extract runway edges based on edge detection and line detection techniques is discussed. The runway images are initially enhanced by dilation, thresholding and edge detection. Based on some unique characteristics like the runway being gray with two white lines indicating the runway boundaries, long and continuous edges of the runway are considered to be straight lines. The straight lines are detected using Convolution operators pertaining to vertical, 45° or -45° lines. Hough Transform is then applied to fit only the pair of lines corresponding to the runway boundaries in certain orientations. The test results prove that combination of Convolution and Hough transform is very competent in detecting runway edges accurately

    Cockney Dialect Group Report

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    When many people think of a British accent two distinct types typically come to mind, an overly posh royal family type accent, or an Oliver Twist Cockney accent. However, the Cockney dialect is a lot more complicated and interesting than simply dropping the ‘h’ and ‘t’ from the English language, and this report will explore the history of the dialect as well as the phonology, the morphology and its syntax

    The Language of the Draughtsboard Sharks: A Conlang Project

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    The language of the draughtsboard sharks is a fictional conlang. This paper describes the history, physical anatomy, means of articulation, morphology, syntax, and grammar of the language through the entirely fictional lens of a research team studying shark communication in New Zealand. Notable aspects of the conlang are its portrayal of imaginary, non-human speech organs created to eliminate a shark’s realistic inability to speak, as well as the absence of a written element to the language largely due to the lack of opposable thumbs (or fingers at all) on sharks. The language also includes IPA charts for both consonants and vowels, with new symbols added for the imaginary speech organs

    The truth about Reader\u27s digest

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    https://stars.library.ucf.edu/prism/1461/thumbnail.jp

    Red tape and barbed wire: Close-up of the McCarran Law in action

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    https://stars.library.ucf.edu/prism/1479/thumbnail.jp

    Enemies of the peace: Profile of the hate-Russia gang

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    https://stars.library.ucf.edu/prism/1819/thumbnail.jp
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