• Title/Summary/Keyword: Accuracy Measure

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Measurement of Hydraulic Pump Flow Ripple Characteristics Based on the ISO 10767-1 and the Evaluation of the Measuring Accuracy (ISO 10767-1에 기초한 유압 펌프의 유량 맥동 측정 및 정밀도 평가)

  • Kim, J.W.;Kang, M.G.;Lee, I.Y.
    • Transactions of The Korea Fluid Power Systems Society
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    • v.4 no.3
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    • pp.22-27
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    • 2007
  • The source flow ripple and the source impedance in hydraulic pump are characteristic values showing fluid-borne vibration characteristics decisively. We cannot measure these two characteristic values directly, but can measure them by some indirect methods. One representative indirect measuring method is ISO 10767-1. The authors constructed a hardware and a software for the measuring method based on ISO 10767-1. Through the error evaluation of the measured results, accuracy of the measuring method using ISO 10767-1 was examined in detail.

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Development of a Method to Measure Droplet Size and Spray Deposition Using Computer Vision (컴퓨터 시각에 의한 분무입자 크기와 분무량 측정법 개발)

  • Suh, S.R.;Kim, T.H.;Sung, J.H.;Chung, J.H.;Yoo, S.N.
    • Journal of Biosystems Engineering
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    • v.19 no.4
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    • pp.369-379
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    • 1994
  • A computer vision system consisted of a microscope, a CCD camera, a frame grabber and a personal computer was used to analyze spraying pattern. An algorithm was developed for the system to measure size of droplets including overlapped droplets, to count number of droplets, and to estimate spray deposition in a certain area from the data obtained. A series of experiment was carried out to test validity of the algorithm. The experiment resulted that accuracy of the droplet size measurement, accuracy of counting the number of droplets and the estimation of spray deposition were within an acceptable range. It was concluded from the results that the computer vision system operated by the developed algorithm is very useful tool to analyze spraying pattern.

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Development of a Rotational Torque Calibration System (회전 토크 교정장치 개발에 관한 연구)

  • 김갑순;권영하
    • Transactions of the Korean Society of Mechanical Engineers
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    • v.17 no.10
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    • pp.2646-2653
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    • 1993
  • A rotational torque calibration system is developed to measure rotational torque of power generating systems and to calibrate non-contact rotational torque measurement systems. The maximum capacity of the developed system is 4.5 N-m. It is composed of a DC motor, a DC generator, a control system, a master torque cell, a slip ling/brush set, supporters, a bed etc. The control system is characterized by the closed-loop control with differential intergrator. Rotational torque measurement test and unit response test are conducted to estimate the accuracy of the developed system. It is found that system maintain high consistency and accuracy with the maximum error of 0.25%, Therefore the developed system can be used to measure the rotational torque of power generating systems and to calibrate non-contact rotational torque measurement systems.

Study on Mobile Broadband Coherent Anti-Stokes Raman Spectrometer For Combustion Diagnostics (연소진단용 이동형 광대역 코헤런트 반 스톡스 라만 분광기에 관한 연구)

  • Park, Chul-Woung;Park, Seung-Nam;Hahn, Jae-Won;Lee, Jong-Ung
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Combustion
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    • v.1 no.2
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    • pp.9-20
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    • 1996
  • We construct a mobile broadband coherent anti-Stokes Raman spectroscopy system to measure the temperature of combustion gases. To improve the accuracy of CARS temperatures due to Stokes lasers, a modeless dye laser is constructed. A monochromator to disperse CARS spectra is also constructed in the spectrometer for easy portability. The accuracy of CARS temperature, measured in graphite tube furnace in reference to a radiation pyrometer, is better than 2 % from 1000 K to 2400 K. The CARS temperature error due to the variation of the spectral distribution of the modeless laser is measured to be less than 1.5 % during five hours operation. As a demonstration of combustion diagnosis, we applied the spectrometer to measure the temperature distribution of the propane air premixed flame.

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A Study on Automatic Measurement of Pronunciation Accuracy of English Speech Produced by Korean Learners of English (한국인 영어 학습자의 발음 정확성 자동 측정방법에 대한 연구)

  • Yun, Weon-Hee;Chung, Hyun-Sung;Jang, Tae-Yeoub
    • Proceedings of the KSPS conference
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    • 2005.11a
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    • pp.17-20
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    • 2005
  • The purpose of this project is to develop a device that can automatically measure pronunciation of English speech produced by Korean learners of English. Pronunciation proficiency will be measured largely in two areas; suprasegmental and segmental areas. In suprasegmental area, intonation and word stress will be traced and compared with those of native speakers by way of statistical methods using tilt parameters. Durations of phones are also examined to measure speakers' naturalness of their pronunciations. In doing so, statistical duration modelling from a large speech database using CART will be considered. For segmental measurement of pronunciation, acoustic probability of a phone, which is a byproduct when doing the forced alignment, will be a basis of scoring pronunciation accuracy of a phone. The final score will be a feedback to the learners to improve their pronunciation.

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A Novel Corner Detector using a Non-cornerness Measure

  • Park, Seokmok;Cho, Woon;Paik, Joonki
    • IEIE Transactions on Smart Processing and Computing
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    • v.6 no.4
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    • pp.253-261
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    • 2017
  • In this paper, a corner detection method based on a new non-cornerness measure is presented. Rather than evaluating local gradients or surface curvatures, as done in previous approaches, a non-cornerness function is developed that can identify stable corners by testing an image region against a set of desirable corner criteria. The non-cornerness function is comprised of two steps: 1) eliminate any pixel located in a flat region and 2) remove any pixel that is positioned along an edge in any orientation. A pixel that passes the non-cornerness test is considered a reliable corner. The proposed method also adopts the idea of non-maximum suppression to remove multiple corners from the results of the non-cornerness function. The proposed method is compared with previous popular methods and is tested with an artificial test image covering several corner forms and three real-world images that are universally used by the community to evaluate the accuracy of corner detectors. The experimental results show that the proposed method outperforms previous corner detectors with respect to accuracy, and that it is suitable for real-time processing.

Measurements of Impervious Surfaces - per-pixel, sub-pixel, and object-oriented classification -

  • Kang, Min Jo;Mesev, Victor;Kim, Won Kyung
    • Korean Journal of Remote Sensing
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    • v.31 no.4
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    • pp.303-319
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    • 2015
  • The objectives of this paper are to measure surface imperviousness using three different classification methods: per-pixel, sub-pixel, and object-oriented classification. They are tested on high-spatial resolution QuickBird data at 2.4 meters (four spectral bands and three principal component bands) as well as a medium-spatial resolution Landsat TM image at 30 meters. To measure impervious surfaces, we selected 30 sample sites with different land uses and residential densities across image representing the city of Phoenix, Arizona, USA. For per-pixel an unsupervised classification is first conducted to provide prior knowledge on the possible candidate spectral classes, and then a supervised classification is performed using the maximum-likelihood rule. For sub-pixel classification, a Linear Spectral Mixture Analysis (LSMA) is used to disentangle land cover information from mixed pixels. For object-oriented classification several different sets of scale parameters and expert decision rules are implemented, including a nearest neighbor classifier. The results from these three methods show that the object-oriented approach (accuracy of 91%) provides more accurate results than those achieved by per-pixel algorithm (accuracy of 67% and 83% using Landsat TM and QuickBird, respectively). It is also clear that sub-pixel algorithm gives more accurate results (accuracy of 87%) in case of intensive and dense urban areas using medium-resolution imagery.

Evaluation of Denoising Filters Based on Edge Locations

  • Seo, Suyoung
    • Korean Journal of Remote Sensing
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    • v.36 no.4
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    • pp.503-513
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    • 2020
  • This paper presents a method to evaluate denoising filters based on edge locations in their denoised images. Image quality assessment has often been performed by using structural similarity (SSIM). However, SSIM does not provide clearly the geometric accuracy of features in denoised images. Thus, in this paper, a method to localize edge locations with subpixel accuracy based on adaptive weighting of gradients is used for obtaining the subpixel locations of edges in ground truth image, noisy images, and denoised images. Then, this paper proposes a method to evaluate the geometric accuracy of edge locations based on root mean squares error (RMSE) and jaggedness with reference to ground truth locations. Jaggedness is a measure proposed in this study to measure the stability of the distribution of edge locations. Tested denoising filters are anisotropic diffusion (AF), bilateral filter, guided filter, weighted guided filter, weighted mean of patches filter, and smoothing filter (SF). SF is a simple filter that smooths images by applying a Gaussian blurring to a noisy image. Experiments were performed with a set of simulated images and natural images. The experimental results show that AF and SF recovered edge locations more accurately than the other tested filters in terms of SSIM, RMSE, and jaggedness and that SF produced better results than AF in terms of jaggedness.

4WS Unmanned Vehicle Lateral Control Using PUS and Gyro Coupled by Kalman Filtering

  • Lee, Kil-Soo;Park, Hyung-Gyu;Lee, Man-Hyung
    • Journal of Navigation and Port Research
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    • v.35 no.2
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    • pp.121-130
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    • 2011
  • The localization of vehicle is an important part of an unmanned vehicle control problem. Pseudolite ultrasonic system(PUS) is the method to find an absolute position with a high accuracy by using ultrasonic sensor. And Gyro is the inertial sensor to measure yaw angle of vehicle. PUS can be able to estimate the position of mobile robot precisely, in which errors are not accumulated. And Gyro is a more faster measure method than PUS. In this paper, we suggest a more accuracy method of calculating PUS which is numerical analysis approach named Newtonian method. And also propose the fusion method to increase the accuracy of estimated angle on moving vehicle by using PUS and Gyro integrated system by Kalman filtering. To control the 4WS unmanned vehicle, the trajectory following algorithm is suggested. And the new concept arbitration of goal controller is suggested. This method considers the desirability function of vehicle state. Finally, the performances of Newtonian method and designed controller were verified from the experimental results with the 4WS vehicle scaled 1/10.

A Useful Technique for Measuring the 3-dimensional Positioning of a Rotating Object (회전체의 효과적인 3차원 위치오차 측정방법)

  • Lee, Eung-Seok;Wi, Hyeon-Gon;Jeong, Ju-No
    • Transactions of the Korean Society of Mechanical Engineers A
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    • v.21 no.6
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    • pp.918-924
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    • 1997
  • A method for measuring the accuracy of rotating objects was studied. Rotating axis errors are significant; such as the spindle error of a manufacturing machine which results in the surface roughness of machined work pieces. Three capacitance type displacement sensors were used to measure the rotating master ball position. The sensors were mounted to the three orthogonal points on the spindle axis. The measurement data were analyzed and shown for rotating spindle accuracy, not only for average roundness error but also for spindle volumetric positional error during the revolutions. This method is simple and economical for industrial field use with regular inspection of rotating machines using portable equipment. Measuring and analyzing time using this method takes only a couple of hours. This method can also measure microscopic amplitude and 3-dimensional direction of vibrating objects.