کلمات کلیدی مربوط به کتاب کتابخانه مطبوعات دانشگاهی در پردازش سیگنال: جلد 4. پردازش سیگنال تصویر، ویدئو و زیست پزشکی و سخت افزار: ابزار دقیق، پردازش سیگنال
در صورت تبدیل فایل کتاب Academic Press Library in Signal Processing: Volume 4. Image, Video and Biomedical Signal Processing, and Hardware به فرمت های PDF، EPUB، AZW3، MOBI و یا DJVU می توانید به پشتیبان اطلاع دهید تا فایل مورد نظر را تبدیل نمایند.
توجه داشته باشید کتاب کتابخانه مطبوعات دانشگاهی در پردازش سیگنال: جلد 4. پردازش سیگنال تصویر، ویدئو و زیست پزشکی و سخت افزار نسخه زبان اصلی می باشد و کتاب ترجمه شده به فارسی نمی باشد. وبسایت اینترنشنال لایبرری ارائه دهنده کتاب های زبان اصلی می باشد و هیچ گونه کتاب ترجمه شده یا نوشته شده به فارسی را ارائه نمی دهد.
Academic Press, 2014. — 1070 pp.
Editors: Trussell J., Srivastava A.,
Roy-Chowdhury A.K., Srivastava A., Naylor P.A., Chellappa R.,
Theodoridis S.
Let us flash back to the 1970s when
the editors-in-chief of this e-reference were graduate
students. One of the time-honored traditions then was to visit
the libraries several times a week to keep track of the latest
research findings. After your advisor and teachers, the
librarians were your best friends. We visited the engineering
and mathematics libraries of our Universities every Friday
afternoon and poured over the IEEE Transactions, Annals of
Statistics, the Journal of Royal Statistical Society,
Biometrika, and other journals so that we could keep track of
the recent results published in these journals. Another ritual
that was part of these outings was to take sufficient number of
coins so that papers of interest could be xeroxed. As there was
no Internet, one would often request copies of reprints from
authors by mailing postcards and most authors would oblige. Our
generation maintained thick folders of hardcopies of papers.
Prof. Azriel Rosenfeld (one of RC’s mentors) maintained a
library of over 30,000 papers going back to the early
1950s!
Another fact to recall is that in the absence of Internet,
research results were not so widely disseminated then and even
if they were, there was a delay between when the results were
published in technologically advanced western countries and
when these results were known to scientists in third world
countries. For example, till the late 1990s, scientists in US
and most countries in Europe had a lead time of at least a year
to 18 months since it took that much time for papers to appear
in journals after submission. Add to this the time it took for
the Transactions to go by surface mails to various libraries in
the world. Scientists who lived and worked in the more
prosperous countries were aware of the progress in their fields
by visiting each other or attending conferences.
Let us race back to 21st century! We live and experience a
world which is fast changing with rates unseen before in the
human history. The era of Information and Knowledge societies
had an impact on all aspects of our social as well as personal
lives. In many ways, it has changed the way we experience and
understand the world around us; that is, the way we learn. Such
a change is much more obvious to the younger generation, which
carries much less momentum from the past, compared to us, the
older generation. A generation which has grew up in the
Internet age, the age of Images and Video games, the age of
IPAD and Kindle, the age of the fast exchange of information.
These new technologies comprise a part of their real world, and
Education and Learning can no more ignore this reality.
Although many questions are still open for discussions among
sociologists, one thing is certain. Electronic publishing and
dissemination, embodying new technologies, is here to stay.
This is the only way that effective pedagogic tools can be
developed and used to assist the learning process from now on.
Many kids in the early school or even preschool years have
their own IPADs to access information in the Internet. When
they grow up to study engineering, science, or medicine or law,
we doubt if they ever will visit a library as they would by
then expect all information to be available at their
fingertips, literally!
Another consequence of this development is the leveling of the
playing field. Many institutions in lesser developed countries
could not afford to buy the IEEE Transactions and other
journals of repute. Even if they did, given the time between
submission and publication of papers in journals and the time
it took for the Transactions to be sent over surface mails,
scientists and engineers in lesser developed countries were
behind by twoyears or so. Also, most libraries did not acquire
the proceedings of conferences and so there was a huge gap in
the awareness of what was going on in technologically advanced
countries. The lucky few who could visit US and some countries
in Europe were able to keep up with the progress in these
countries. This has changed. Anyone with an Internet connection
can request or download papers from the sites of scientists.
Thus there is a leveling of the playing field which will lead
to more scientist and engineers being groomed all over the
world.
The aim of Online Reference for Signal Processing project is to
implement such a vision. We all know that asking any of our
students to search for information, the first step for him/her
will be to click on the web and possibly in the Wikipedia. This
was the inspiration for our project. To develop a site, related
to the Signal Processing, where a selected set of reviewed
articles will become available at a first click. However, these
articles are fully refereed and written by experts in the
respected topic. Moreover, the authors will have the luxury to
update their articles regularly, so that to keep up with the
advances that take place as time evolves. This will have a
double benefit. Such articles, besides the more classical
material, will also convey the most recent results providing
the students/researchers with up-to-date information. In
addition, the authors will have the chance of making their
article a more permanent source of reference, that keeps up its
freshness in spite of the passing time.
The other major advantage is that authors have the chance to
provide, alongside their chapters, any multimedia tool in order
to clarify concepts as well as to demonstrate more vividly the
performance of various methods, in addition to the static
figures and tables. Such tools can be updated at the author’s
will, building upon previous experience and comments. We do
hope that, in future editions, this aspect of this project will
be further enriched and strengthened.
In the previously stated context, the Online Reference in
Signal Processing provides a revolutionary way of accessing,
updating and interacting with online content. In particular,
the Online Reference will be a living, highly structured, and
searchable peer-reviewed electronic reference in
signal/image/video Processing and related applications, using
existing books and newly commissioned content, which gives
tutorial overviews of the latest technologies and research, key
equations, algorithms, applications, standards, code, core
principles, and links to key Elsevier journal articles and
abstracts of non-Elsevier journals.
The audience of the Online Reference in Signal Processing is
intended to include practicing engineers in signal/image
processing and applications, researchers, PhD students, post
Docs, consultants, and policy makers in governments. In
particular, the readers can be benefited in the following
needs:
To learn about new areas outside their own expertise.
To understand how their area of research is connected to other
areas outside their expertise.
To learn how different areas are interconnected and impact on
each other: the need for a helicopter perspective that shows
the wood for the trees.
To keep up-to-date with new technologies as they develop: what
they are about, what is their potential, what are the research
issues that need to be resolved, and how can they be
used.
To find the best and most appropriate journal papers and
keeping up-to-date with the newest, best papers as they are
written.
To link principles to the new technologies.
The Signal Processing topics have been divided into a number of
subtopics, which have also dictated the way the different
articles have been compiled together. Each one of the subtopics
has been coordinated by an AE (Associate Editor). In
particular:
Volume 1 /file/1421357/
Signal Processing Theory
Machine Learning
Volume 2 /file/1421361/
DSP for Communications
Radar Signal Processing
Volume 3 /file/1421364/
Statistical SP
Array Signal Processing
Volume 4 /file/1421366/
Image Enhancement and Restoration
Image Analysis and Recognition
Video Processing (other than compression), Tracking, Super
Resolution, Motion Estimation
Hardware and Software for Signal Processing Applications
Speech Processing/Audio Processing
Still Image Compression
Video Compression
The articles included in the current editions comprise the
first phase of the project. In the second phase, besides the
updates of the current articles, more articles will be included
to further enrich the existing number of topics. Also, we
envisage that, in the future editions, besides the scientific
articles we are going to be able to include articles of
historical value. Signal Processing has now reached an age that
its history has to be traced back and written.
Last but not least, we would like to thank all the authors for
their effort to contribute in this new and exciting project. We
earnestly hope that in the area of Signal Processing, this
reference will help level the playing field by highlighting the
research progress made in a timely and accessible manner to
anyone who has access to the Internet. With this effort the
next breakthrough advances may be coming from all around the
world.
The companion site for this work:
http://booksite.elsevier.com/9780124166165 includes multimedia
files (Video/Audio) and MATLAB codes for selected chapters.
Section 1: Image
Enhancement/Restoration and Digital Imaging
Digital Imaging: Capture, Display, Restoration, and
Enhancement
Image Quality in Consumer Digital Cameras
Image and Document Capture—State-of-the-Art and a Glance into
the Future
Image Display—Mobile Imaging and Interactive Image
Processing
Image Display—Printing (Desktop, Commercial)
Image Restoration: Fundamentals of Image Restoration
Original
Iterative Methods for Image Restoration
Image Processing at Your Fingertips: The New Horizon of Mobile
Imaging
Section 2: Image Analysis and
Recognition
Image Analysis and Recognition
Multi-Path Marginal Space Learning for Object Detection
Markov Models and MCMC Algorithms in Image Processing
Identifying Multivariate Imaging Patterns: Supervised,
Semi-Supervised, and Unsupervised Learning Perspectives
Section 3: Video Processing
Video Processing—An Overview
Foveated Image and Video Processing and Search
Segmentation-Free Biometric Recognition Using Correlation
Filters
Dynamical Systems in Video Analysis
Image-Based Rendering
Activity Retrieval in Large Surveillance Videos
Multi-Target Tracking in Video
Compressive Sensing for Video Applications
Virtual Vision for Camera Networks Research
Section 4: Hardware and Software
Introduction: Hardware and Software
Distributed Smart Cameras for Distributed Computer Vision
Mapping Parameterized Dataflow Graphs onto FPGA Platforms
Distributed Estimation
Section 5: Audio Signal Processing
Introduction to Audio Signal Processing
Music Signal Processing
Perceptual Audio Coding
Section 6: Acoustic Signal Processing
Introduction to Acoustic Signal Processing
Acoustic Echo Control
Dereverberation
Sound Field Synthesis
Section 7: Speech Processing
Introduction to Speech Processing
Speech Production Modeling and Analysis
Enhancement