Search results
(181 - 200 of 206)
Pages
- Title
- Technology News, November 04, 1941
- Date
- 1941-11-04, 1941-11-04
- Collection
- Technology News Microfilm collection, 1928-1981
- Title
- Technology News, December 02, 1941
- Date
- 1941-12-02, 1941-12-02
- Collection
- Technology News Microfilm collection, 1928-1981
- Title
- Investigation of high-tension switching equipments
- Creator
- Clarke, Fred, Sturgess, Fred M.
- Date
- 2009, 1907
- Publisher
- Armour Institute of Technology
- Description
-
http://www.archive.org/details/investigationofh00clar
Thesis (B.S.)--Armour Institute of Technology; Bibliography: leaves 80-90
- Title
- Investigation of the chemical literature
- Creator
- Barrows, Frank E.
- Date
- 2009, 1919
- Publisher
- Armour Institute of Technology
- Description
-
http://www.archive.org/details/investigationofc00barr
Thesis (B.S.)--Armour Institute of Technology
- Title
- Designs and specifications of street pavements for Valparaiso, Indiana
- Creator
- Harvey, William F, Jones, Clarence I
- Date
- 2009, 1905
- Publisher
- Armour Institute of Technology
- Description
-
http://www.archive.org/details/designsspecifica00harv
Thesis (B.S.)--Armour Institute of Technology
- Title
- A BIM-BASED LIFE CYCLE ASSESSMENT TOOL OF EMBODIED ENERGY AND ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACTS OF REINFORCED CONCRETE TALL BUILDINGS
- Creator
- Ma, Lijian
- Date
- 2022
- Description
-
Today 55 percent of population in the world lives in urban areas which is expected to increase to 68 percent by the year 2050. In the cities,...
Show moreToday 55 percent of population in the world lives in urban areas which is expected to increase to 68 percent by the year 2050. In the cities, high-rise buildings as symbols of the modern cityscape are dominating the skylines, but the data to demonstrate their embodied energy and environmental impacts are scarce, compared to low- or mid-rise buildings. Reducing the embodied energy and environmental impacts of buildings is critical as about 42 percent of primary energy use and 39 percent of the global greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions come from the building sector. However, it is an overlooked area in embodied energy and environmental impacts of tall buildings. This doctoral research aims to investigate the effects of tall buildings on embodied energy and environmental impacts by using process-based life cycle assessment (LCA) methodology within Building Information Modelling (BIM) environment, which provides construction industry platform to incorporate sustainability information in architectural design. This doctoral research is carried out through a literature review on embodied energy of high-rise buildings. Current LCA methods of buildings are also discussed in the literature review. It then develops a framework for BIM-based assessment of the embodied energy and environmental impacts of tall buildings. To achieve that, a case study of tall reinforced concrete building is applied, by using ISO 14040 and 14044 guidelines with available database, Revit and Tally application in Revit. The author concentrates on embodied energy and environmental impacts of reinforced concrete tall buildings. Finally, the association between design and construction variables with embodied energy and environmental impacts is explored. This research will lead to significant contributions. A comprehensive study on embodied energy and environmental impacts of high-rise building will address a major gap in LCA literature. Researchers and environmental consultants can use the results of this research to create design tools to evaluate environmental impacts of high-rise buildings. Also, architects can use the results of this research to develop insight into the environmental performance of tall buildings in early design stage. Architects and engineers can also use the results to optimize tall building design for low embodied energy and environmental impacts. Finally, the results of this research will enable architects, engineers, planners, and policymakers develop more sustainable built environments.
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- Title
- ARCHITECTURE FOR COLLABORATIVE CREATIVITY - SPACE WE-Q: SPACE INTELLIGENCE EMPOWERING CREATIVE WE CULTURE IN LEARNING-DRIVEN ENVIRONMENTS
- Creator
- Mor-Avi, Anat
- Date
- 2020
- Description
-
Changes in societal culture, along with research on how we learn, challenge current architectural solutions. Education’s shifting paradigms...
Show moreChanges in societal culture, along with research on how we learn, challenge current architectural solutions. Education’s shifting paradigms align with these changes and move teaching strategies from teacher-centered to learner-centered, and from formal and passive, to informal and active modes. Another shift emphasizes collaboration and participatory creativity, which evolve the idea of the “collective,” or “We” versus “I” scenarios. In addition, studies show that creativity flourishes in specific contradictory performances. Supporting these reported changes, new knowledge, and paradigm shifts, this research studied how an active, adaptive architectural design approach might emerge into the learning and creative processes. Evidence indicates that “design and space do matter,” particularly in learning- and working-driven domains. Empirical research has been weak in addressing this understanding relative to architectural solutions, affordances, behaviors, and emotions, promoting collaborative creativity. This research aimed to investigate patterns of architectural affordances believing to impact and empower collaborative cultures and behaviors in learning environments (“WE CULTURE”), specifically motions and emotions. A Mixed-method research design was conducted, using two techniques: (a) a content analysis of awarded learning and working environments, and (b) a post-occupancy evaluation using ethnographic techniques to study the Kaplan Innovation Institute at the Illinois Institute of Technology in Chicago, Illinois, USA. In an effort to provide an applied design study, a visual pattern language related to cultures of learning, environment behavior, and emotions was developed. The pattern language is the platform for designing intelligent spaces, SPACE WE-Q, promoting collaborative behaviors, and creativity through adaptive and behavior-based systems of active affordances. SPACE WE-Q offers a planned adaptive system for unplanned creative processes that emerges into learning and suggesting a new relationship between architecture and education, between architects and users, and between users and space.
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- Title
- POLARIZATION COUPLING IN SEMICONDUCTOR NANO-DIMERS IN THE TERAHERTZ RANGE
- Creator
- Hu, Zhijing
- Date
- 2017, 2017-05
- Description
-
Surface plasmon resonance (SPR) occurs at the interface of a semiconductor and a dielectric when certain conditions are satisfied. SPR is...
Show moreSurface plasmon resonance (SPR) occurs at the interface of a semiconductor and a dielectric when certain conditions are satisfied. SPR is impetus to new sensor and device development in the optical range, with nanoparticles of noble metals taking up major roles. Typical conduction band electron concentrations in semiconductors lead to resonance frequencies in the terahertz and infrared bands. While the response strength is weaker than those exhibited by metals, it can be made up for by the formation of aggregates. The added degree of freedom by doping or carrier injection further enhances the versatility of semiconductor nanoclusters. To obtain a first principle solution to the coupled set of equations for charge carrier transport and electrodynamics in a conductive cluster is a formidable task with a high computational cost. Employing a finite-element based tool, the COMSOL Multiphysics Simulation Software, the interaction inside and outside some elementary semiconductor structures such as slab and sphere have been solved, which revealed the screening of the internal field while displaying dispersion and absorptions effects. The study of semiconductor dimer also showed a significant field enhancement and frequency shift. Under strong applied field, asymmetric polarization within the particles is revealed. The accompanying nonlinear polarization response can be employed to develop new devices. These model structures can serve to provide insight to the analysis and synthesis more complex structures.
Ph.D. in Electrical Engineering, May 2017
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- Title
- The Studio Practice for Sustainable (Craft) Production
- Creator
- Werdhaningsih, Hendriana
- Date
- 2022
- Description
-
Craft market demand globally is rising. On the other hand, the domination of economic goals in craft production is threading the social system...
Show moreCraft market demand globally is rising. On the other hand, the domination of economic goals in craft production is threading the social system and the environment. Craft production facts do not represent the sustainable development principles that should be a central concept for this age. Design as practice and method had not yet correctly facilitated craft production to embrace the harmony of the social, environmental, and economic systems. Believing that studio is a core design practice, this research investigated studio practice through interviews, field research, and action research conducted in Indonesia and the US. It developed a model called Studio Practice for Sustainable (Craft) Production, the SP2 Model. The Model helps designers, the crafts community, and stakeholders ensure their role in the studio practice and determine their goals for sustainable development. The SP2 Model offers alternative practical solutions in craft production, contributes to polycentric discourse, and designs interventions in sustainable development models.
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- Title
- Technology News, February 17, 1942
- Date
- 1942-02-17, 1942-02-17
- Collection
- Technology News Microfilm collection, 1928-1981
- Title
- Impact of powder heterogeneity on particle collection behaviors in a cylindrical electrostatic precipitator
- Creator
- Lee, Eric Monsu
- Date
- 2019
- Description
-
Injection of powdered activated carbon (PAC) upstream of electrostatic precipitators (ESPs) has been the most commonly used strategy for post...
Show moreInjection of powdered activated carbon (PAC) upstream of electrostatic precipitators (ESPs) has been the most commonly used strategy for post-combustion mercury emissions control at coal-fired power plants. However, as PAC injection rate increases, the darkening filters with particulate matter (PM) samples collected downstream of ESPs indicates an unidentified performance anomaly. It has been hypothesized that injection of PAC can introduce unexpected heterogeneity to the PM collection process in ESPs as PAC differs greatly from fly ash in both physical and electrical properties and can potentially pose challenges to ESPs that were initially operated for coal fly ash removal. The present study is carried out by an experimental study and a numerical study. The experimental study centers on the differential collection of PAC-fly ash admixtures and shows increasing trends of unaccounted-for particles as PAC concentration increases in the admixtures. In addition, measurement of powder resistivity of the ESP-collected powder samples infers that the unaccounted-for particles become more PAC-concentrated as PAC concentration becomes higher in the admixtures. The numerical study aims to extract additional variable(s) leading to higher percentage of unaccounted-for particles by using COMSOL Multiphysics. The Euler-Lagrange numerical scheme enables the modeling of the cylindrical ESP used during the experimental study and allows for solving the interrelated physics, including electric field coupled with charge conservation, electro-hydro-dynamics (EHD) fluid velocity field, and particle tracing. The model shows that the induced EHD vortex flow field due to the inhomogeneous current density along the collection electrode can result in continue entrainment of sub-micrometer particles of both fly ash and PAC. The experimental and numerical results provide new understanding for explaining the increasingly darkening PM filters as PAC injection rate increases.
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- Title
- High speed tool steel on lathe work
- Creator
- Hayes, C. E., Wilson, F. N.
- Date
- 2009, 1906
- Publisher
- Armour Institute of Technology
- Description
-
http://www.archive.org/details/highspeedtoolste00haye
Thesis (B.S.)--Armour Institute of Technology
- Title
- USER GENERATED DATA ANALYSIS AND UTILIZATION
- Creator
- Liu, Shizhu
- Date
- 2012-12-12, 2012-12
- Description
-
Computer-mediated communication is becoming the most convenient and important way of sharing and exchanging information. The large volume and...
Show moreComputer-mediated communication is becoming the most convenient and important way of sharing and exchanging information. The large volume and diversity of user generated content as well as pervasive user opinions on the web make existing text processing methods ine cient and ine ective. Hence, there is a need for better ways of analyzing and utilizing user generated content. My thesis focuses on user generated data and is composed of two main parts: sentiment analysis and content analysis. I present a case study in which I use machine learning techniques to analyze real-world survey responses. Supervised techniques are exploited to classify customers' loyalty based on their comments and estimate a Net Promoter Score (NPS). NPS is a crucial indicator which has been used as a means of measuring survey results with a single estimator. I de ne three patterns to support generalized sentiment-bearing expression extraction, and design a set of heuristic rules to detect both explicit and implicit negations. By altering existing dependency with detected negations and generalized sentiment-bearing expressions I am able to construct more accurate sentiment features. Our results demonstrate that generalized dependency-based features are more e ective when compared to standard features. For content analysis, the thesis addresses the problem of user generated content summarization. I focus on two sub-problems: how to summarize the novel information from user generated content and how to present the evolutionary theme threads from temporal text collections with summaries. I design two speci c topic models for these two summarization tasks respectively. To discover similar and supplemental topics in user opinions with respect to the descriptive text provided by a publisher, I propose a semi-supervised generative model by casting the local publishers descriptive elds as a prior of a resembling topic. The most representative sentences in user opinions are classi ed based on their sentiment and used to construct a summary of x the comments. To track changes of topics in temporal text collections, I extend the probabilistic model to sentence level and use name entity to make the extracted theme thread easier to understand. Experimental results demonstrate the e ectiveness of the proposed models.
PH.D in Computer Science, December 2012
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- Title
- Nernst glower its development, characteristics and application to illumination practice
- Creator
- Eustice, Alfred L
- Date
- 2009, 1910
- Publisher
- Armour Institute of Technology
- Description
-
http://www.archive.org/details/nernstgloweritsd00eust
Thesis (B.S.)--Armour Institute of Technology
- Title
- THE VERY ENERGETIC RADIATION IMAGING TELESCOPE ARRAY SYSTEM OBSERVATIONS OF THE STARBURST GALAXY M82
- Creator
- Ratliff, Gayle
- Date
- 2015, 2015-07
- Description
-
This work describes the Very Energetic Radiation Imaging Telescope Array Systems (VERITAS) observations of the starburst galaxy M82 by...
Show moreThis work describes the Very Energetic Radiation Imaging Telescope Array Systems (VERITAS) observations of the starburst galaxy M82 by documenting the analysis of 231 quality-selected hours of observational data taken between 2008 and 2014. The prototypical starburst galaxy, M82’s high supernova (SN) rate and dense central accumulation of molecular gas make it a promising candidate for studying cosmic ray (CR) acceleration and propagation with the detection of di↵use very high energy (VHE; approximately 100 GeV-100 TeV) !-ray emission. This di↵use emission is predicted to result from proton-proton interactions within the galaxy’s core that produce VHE !-rays through neutral pion decay. This work confirms the results of the initial VERITAS publication covering 137 hours of M82 observations between January 2008 and April 2009, yielding a total of 103.5 excess !-ray-like events (0.007 !/min, 5.7 pre-trial statistical significance) from a deeper exposure of 231 hours of observation. The spectral properties found are in agreement with the original detection within errors ("=2.85 ± 0.39). These results are consistent with paradigms that describe the production of CRs via the conversion of mechanical energy generated in supernovae (SNe). These findings will improve current di↵use emission models by better constraining galaxy parameters and by providing insight into CR proton loss processes and timescales, with further understanding to be gained with the introduction of the Cherenkov Telescope Array (CTA). xiiThis work describes the Very Energetic Radiation Imaging Telescope Array Systems (VERITAS) observations of the starburst galaxy M82 by documenting the analysis of 231 quality-selected hours of observational data taken between 2008 and 2014. The prototypical starburst galaxy, M82’s high supernova (SN) rate and dense central accumulation of molecular gas make it a promising candidate for studying cosmic ray (CR) acceleration and propagation with the detection of di↵use very high energy (VHE; approximately 100 GeV-100 TeV) !-ray emission. This di↵use emission is predicted to result from proton-proton interactions within the galaxy’s core that produce VHE !-rays through neutral pion decay. This work confirms the results of the initial VERITAS publication covering 137 hours of M82 observations between January 2008 and April 2009, yielding a total of 103.5 excess !-ray-like events (0.007 !/min, 5.7 pre-trial statistical significance) from a deeper exposure of 231 hours of observation. The spectral properties found are in agreement with the original detection within errors ("=2.85 ± 0.39). These results are consistent with paradigms that describe the production of CRs via the conversion of mechanical energy generated in supernovae (SNe). These findings will improve current di↵use emission models by better constraining galaxy parameters and by providing insight into CR proton loss processes and timescales, with further understanding to be gained with the introduction of the Cherenkov Telescope Array (CTA). xiiThis work describes the Very Energetic Radiation Imaging Telescope Array Systems (VERITAS) observations of the starburst galaxy M82 by documenting the analysis of 231 quality-selected hours of observational data taken between 2008 and 2014. The prototypical starburst galaxy, M82’s high supernova (SN) rate and dense central accumulation of molecular gas make it a promising candidate for studying cosmic ray (CR) acceleration and propagation with the detection of di↵use very high energy (VHE; approximately 100 GeV-100 TeV) !-ray emission. This di↵use emission is predicted to result from proton-proton interactions within the galaxy’s core that produce VHE !-rays through neutral pion decay. This work confirms the results of the initial VERITAS publication covering 137 hours of M82 observations between January 2008 and April 2009, yielding a total of 103.5 excess !-ray-like events (0.007 !/min, 5.7 pre-trial statistical significance) from a deeper exposure of 231 hours of observation. The spectral properties found are in agreement with the original detection within errors ("=2.85 ± 0.39). These results are consistent with paradigms that describe the production of CRs via the conversion of mechanical energy generated in supernovae (SNe). These findings will improve current di↵use emission models by better constraining galaxy parameters and by providing insight into CR proton loss processes and timescales, with further understanding to be gained with the introduction of the Cherenkov Telescope Array (CTA). xiiThis work describes the Very Energetic Radiation Imaging Telescope Array Systems (VERITAS) observations of the starburst galaxy M82 by documenting the analysis of 231 quality-selected hours of observational data taken between 2008 and 2014. The prototypical starburst galaxy, M82’s high supernova (SN) rate and dense central accumulation of molecular gas make it a promising candidate for studying cosmic ray (CR) acceleration and propagation with the detection of di↵use very high energy (VHE; approximately 100 GeV-100 TeV) !-ray emission. This di↵use emission is predicted to result from proton-proton interactions within the galaxy’s core that produce VHE !-rays through neutral pion decay. This work confirms the results of the initial VERITAS publication covering 137 hours of M82 observations between January 2008 and April 2009, yielding a total of 103.5 excess !-ray-like events (0.007 !/min, 5.7 pre-trial statistical significance) from a deeper exposure of 231 hours of observation. The spectral properties found are in agreement with the original detection within errors ("=2.85 ± 0.39). These results are consistent with paradigms that describe the production of CRs via the conversion of mechanical energy generated in supernovae (SNe). These findings will improve current di↵use emission models by better constraining galaxy parameters and by providing insight into CR proton loss processes and timescales, with further understanding to be gained with the introduction of the Cherenkov Telescope Array (CTA). xiiThis work describes the Very Energetic Radiation Imaging Telescope Array Systems (VERITAS) observations of the starburst galaxy M82 by documenting the analysis of 231 quality-selected hours of observational data taken between 2008 and 2014. The prototypical starburst galaxy, M82’s high supernova (SN) rate and dense central accumulation of molecular gas make it a promising candidate for studying cosmic ray (CR) acceleration and propagation with the detection of di↵use very high energy (VHE; approximately 100 GeV-100 TeV) !-ray emission. This di↵use emission is predicted to result from proton-proton interactions within the galaxy’s core that produce VHE !-rays through neutral pion decay. This work confirms the results of the initial VERITAS publication covering 137 hours of M82 observations between January 2008 and April 2009, yielding a total of 103.5 excess !-ray-like events (0.007 !/min, 5.7 pre-trial statistical significance) from a deeper exposure of 231 hours of observation. The spectral properties found are in agreement with the original detection within errors ("=2.85 ± 0.39). These results are consistent with paradigms that describe the production of CRs via the conversion of mechanical energy generated in supernovae (SNe). These findings will improve current di↵use emission models by better constraining galaxy parameters and by providing insight into CR proton loss processes and timescales, with further understanding to be gained with the introduction of the Cherenkov Telescope Array (CTA).
Ph.D. in Physics, July 2015
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- Title
- ADVANCING OPEN-SOURCE TOOLS FOR INDOOR ENVIRONMENTAL MONITORING AND BUILDING SYSTEMS CONTROLS USING WIRELESS SENSOR NETWORKS
- Creator
- Ali, Akram Syed
- Date
- 2021
- Description
-
Incorporating data monitoring and visualization tools in buildings can provide a glimpse into their energy use, thermal performance, daily...
Show moreIncorporating data monitoring and visualization tools in buildings can provide a glimpse into their energy use, thermal performance, daily operation, and maintenance requirements. However, buildings have traditionally been monitored using hardware and software that are expensive, proprietary, and often limited in terms of ease of use and flexibility. Many existing buildings remain unmonitored or poorly monitored, leaving many opportunities for energy savings and improving indoor environmental conditions unaddressed. To this end, the goal of this research is to develop and demonstrate an open-source hardware and software platform for monitoring and controlling the performance of buildings and their systems, called Elemental. It is designed to provide real-time data on indoor environmental quality, energy usage, heating, ventilating, and air-conditioning (HVAC) operation, and other factors to its users, and provide easy development of building controls. It combines: (i) custom low power printed circuit boards (PCBs) with RF transceivers for wireless sensors, control nodes, and USB gateway, (ii) a Raspberry Pi with custom firmware acting as a backhaul, and (iii) custom software applications that manage data storage, device configuration and interface for querying and visualizing the data in real-time. The platform is built around the idea of a private, secure, and open technology for the built environment. Among its many applications, the platform allows occupants to investigate anomalies in energy usage, environmental quality, and thermal performance. It also includes multiple frontends to view and analyze building activity data, which can be used directly in building controls. This proposal describes the development process of the hardware and software used in the Elemental platform along with three distinct applications including: (1) deployment in a research lab for long-term data collection and automated analysis, (2) use as a full-home energy and environmental monitoring solution, and (3) building heating system automation at the room-level with the development and deployment of a custom radiator control. Through these applications, this work demonstrates that the platform allows easy and virtually unlimited datalogging, monitoring, and analysis of real-time sensor data with low setup costs. Low-power sensor nodes placed in abundance in a building can also provide precise and immediate fault-detection, allowing for tuning equipment for more efficient operation and faster maintenance during the lifetime of the building.
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- Title
- INTERPRETATION OF ADAPTIVE REUSE ISSUES IN MULTIPLE SCALES, BUILDING, NEIGHBORHOOD, CITY
- Creator
- Loukas, Panagiota
- Date
- 2015, 2015-12
- Description
-
The purpose of this study is to interpret the topic of adaptive reuse, focusing on the reuse of existing buildings and new structures inserted...
Show moreThe purpose of this study is to interpret the topic of adaptive reuse, focusing on the reuse of existing buildings and new structures inserted into them. The issues related with adaptive reuse are not a new field in architecture but is related to previous practices such as preservation and conservation. Focusing on the issue of adaptive reuse in order for existing structures to cover the new needs of an emerging society, giving a new use. Other disciplines, such as social and political are forming and guiding those decisions. The topic of what to keep and what to discard is global and various solutions has been given in the past years, focusing on monuments and landmarks conservation, preservation or practices of adaptation in the cities history. The research analysis in various scales, engaging the site to its surrounding, through neighborhood analysis and its urban context are important. Understanding the problem means focusing the research not only on the aspect of architecture agenda since there are political and social practices engaging with the transformation. It means focusing on the issue of adaptive reuse as an important cultural topic related with social, political and economic factors.
M.S. in Architecture, December 2015
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- Title
- CASE-ADAPTIVE PROCESSING FOR IMPROVING ACCURACY IN COMPUTER-AIDED DIAGNOSIS OF BREAST CANCER
- Creator
- Sainz De Cea, Maria Victoria
- Date
- 2018, 2018-05
- Description
-
Breast cancer is the most commonly diagnosed cancer among women (apart from skin cancer) in the US. If detected early, the five-year survival...
Show moreBreast cancer is the most commonly diagnosed cancer among women (apart from skin cancer) in the US. If detected early, the five-year survival rate is 99%. Because of this, early detection of breast cancer has been an extensively studied topic over the years, and screening mammography is the gold standard for this purpose. Microcalcifications (MCs) are tiny calcium deposits that appear as bright spots in mammogram images, and they can be an early sign of breast cancer in asymptomatic women. Computer aided diagnosis (CAD) tools can be used to assist radiologists in detecting MCs and classifying them as benign or malignant. CAD of breast cancer is often hampered by the presence of false positives (FP) among the detected MCs when a reasonable sensitivity level is achieved. The FPs can be caused by MC-like noise, linear structures, etc. Due to the wide range of factors causing FPs, there is a great inter-patient variability, which can degrade the performance of CAD systems. In this work, we aim to reduce the inter-patient variability of CAD systems in order to improve the performance in both MC detection (Computer aided detection or CADe) and classification of MC clusters (Computer aided diagnosis or CADx). The first part of this thesis focuses on MC detection. We first develop a framework for estimating the accuracy in detection of individual MCs within a lesion region. This framework is general and can be applied to any MC detector. The number of FP detections can vary greatly from patient to patient, so having this knowledge will be useful to make decisions in both CADe and CADx systems. Secondly, we present a case-adaptive method for CADe based on Bayes’ risks, where a distribution is fit to the FPs from a mammogram under consideration, based on which the optimal detection threshold is determined for each patient. Finally we present an outlier approach for detection of individual MCs in a lesion region. This approach is based on the fact that individual MCs are usually different from the FPs (brighter, larger in extent), so they can be detected as statistical outliers. The outlier detection is done in a case-by-case basis, which can yield not only a reduction in the number of FPs but also an increase on the uniformity of the detection accuracy among different cases. The second part of the thesis is focused on CADx. We apply the methods developed in the first part to improve the uniformity and performance in the classification of detected lesions as benign or malignant. For this purpose we first present a quality factor approach for adjusting the contribution of the detected individual MCs to the final feature set. Those detections with a higher quality factor can have more impact in the final features, therefore mitigating the effect of the FP detections. Finally, we use the estimated detection accuracy to determine the optimal detection operating threshold. This is shown to boost the CADx performance.
Ph.D. in Electrical Engineering, May 2018
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- Title
- Doing physics : a festschrift for Thomas Erber
- Date
- 2010, 2010
- Publisher
- IIT Press, Chicago, IL
- Description
-
Doing Physics is a festschrift (collection of articles, essays, and rememberances) published in honor of Illinois Tech Physics professor...
Show moreDoing Physics is a festschrift (collection of articles, essays, and rememberances) published in honor of Illinois Tech Physics professor Thomas Erber's 80th birthday. Selections were authored by Erber's colleagues, former stduents, and fellow scholars. This book was released in print form, this file was the original pdf assembled by editor Porter Johnson and submitted for printing with the front and rear covers added.
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- Title
- A history of the development of the suspension bridge
- Creator
- Mann, Herbert A
- Date
- 2009, 1921
- Publisher
- Armour Institute of Technology
- Description
-
http://www.archive.org/details/historyofdevelop00mann
Thesis (B.S.)--Armour Institute of Technology; Bibliography: leaves 86-98