Advances in Engineering Research. Volume 35 (e-bog) af -
Victoria M. Petrova (redaktør)

Advances in Engineering Research. Volume 35 e-bog

2921,57 DKK (inkl. moms 3651,96 DKK)
Advances in Engineering Research. Volume 35 first provides a classification scheme of assembly line balancing problems according to characteristic practical settings, highlighting relevant model extensions which are required to reflect real-world problems. Additionally, an assembly line balancing problem is introduced through designing an integrated assembly line and addressing the number of wo...
E-bog 2921,57 DKK
Forfattere Victoria M. Petrova (redaktør)
Forlag Nova
Udgivet 15 maj 2020
Længde 214 sider
Genrer Engineering: general
Sprog English
Format pdf
Beskyttelse LCP
ISBN 9781536178524
Advances in Engineering Research. Volume 35 first provides a classification scheme of assembly line balancing problems according to characteristic practical settings, highlighting relevant model extensions which are required to reflect real-world problems. Additionally, an assembly line balancing problem is introduced through designing an integrated assembly line and addressing the number of workstations and simultaneous assignments of skilled and unskilled workers. The authors describe an analogy between the methods of adaptive control used in classical control theory and practice on the one hand, and the methods of self-learning used in artificial intelligence systems on the other hand. In one study, a long short-term memory (LSTM) and a Bi-LSTM are proposed to use for classifying the activities of daily living. The accuracy of the proposed approach is evaluated against the current state-of-the-art methods. Two questions regarding very large-scale integration (VSLI) implementation of the X11 algorithm are addressed: how such algorithms are efficiently implemented at once, as well as whether it is possible to use the methods applied in such a VLSI in the implementation of more powerful VLSIs. The concluding study illustrates the azimuth concept in synthetic aperture radar thro ugh an analytical description of basic state of the art azimuth signal processing performed to generate synthetic aperture radar images.