17.1 Digital Image Processing Image Capture. Point Operations Image Enhancement. Digital Purdue University Image Compression. Reconstruction. Edge Detection.Analysis Charles A.Bouman and Computer Vision Purdue University 17.2 Video Signal Processing Sampling. Quantization. Vector Quantization.Video Sarah A. Rajala Compression Informatin Preserving Coders.Predictive North Carolina State University Coding. Motion-Compensated Predictive Coding- Transform Coding. Subband Coding HDTV. Motion Estimation N.K.Bose
118 Computer Design for pennsylvania State University Biomedical applications The Finite Difference Time Domain(FDTD)[Yee, 1966; Kunz and Luebbers, 1993; Taflove, 1995 is a numerical method for the solution of electromagnetic field interaction problems. It utilizes a geometry mesh, usually of
Command, Control, and Communications(C3) G. Clapp Ocean Surveillance Center 103.3 The Technologies of C 103.4 The Dynamics of Encounters D. Sworder 103.5 The Role of the human Decisionmaker in C3 University of California, San Diego 103.6 Summary 103.1 Scope The focus of this chapter is not a detailed profile of a current or planned military C system but it is rather on programmatic reorderings render such express descriptions to become rapidly
The ability of a company to build a knowledge core and continuously create new nowledge is critical to the success of product development. There are four areas where knowledge is needed for product development the different cultures of the world their needs wants and attitudes. and how they can assimilate and absorb new products
How to construct various control charts Which control charts to use for a particular type of data How to measure the capability of a process The basic themes of quality management and Deming’s 14 points The basic aspects of Six Sigma
Formulate null (H0) and alternative hypotheses (H1) for applications involving one sample population mean or proportion Formulate a decision rule for testing a hypothesis Know how to use the critical value and p-value approaches to test the null hypothesis (for both mean and proportion problems) Know what Type I and Type II errors are