2018
|
Angello, G.; Zhao, G.; Manam, A. B.; Gutierrez-Osuna, R. Training Behavior of Successful Tacton-Phoneme Learners Proceedings Article In: IEEE Haptics Symposium, 2018. @inproceedings{genna2018tactons,
title = {Training Behavior of Successful Tacton-Phoneme Learners},
author = {G. Angello and G. Zhao and A. B. Manam and R. Gutierrez-Osuna},
url = {https://psi.engr.tamu.edu/wp-content/uploads/2022/01/AngelloHaptics2018-2.pdf},
year = {2018},
date = {2018-03-25},
booktitle = {IEEE Haptics Symposium},
keywords = {Other, Speech},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {inproceedings}
}
|
2015
|
Gupta, A; Gutierrez-Osuna, R; Christy, M; Capitanu, B; Auvil, L; Grumbach, L; Furuta, R; Mandell, L Automatic assessment of OCR quality in historical documents Proceedings Article In: Proc. AAAI, 2015. @inproceedings{gupta2015aaai,
title = {Automatic assessment of OCR quality in historical documents},
author = {A Gupta and R Gutierrez-Osuna and M Christy and B Capitanu and L Auvil and L Grumbach and R Furuta and L Mandell},
url = {https://psi.engr.tamu.edu/wp-content/uploads/2018/01/gupta2015aaai.pdf},
year = {2015},
date = {2015-01-25},
booktitle = {Proc. AAAI},
volume = {in press},
keywords = {OCR, Other, Pattern recognition},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {inproceedings}
}
|
2014
|
Christy, M; Auvil, L; Gutierrez-Osuna, R; Capitanu, B; Gupta, A; Grumbach, E Diagnosing Page Image Problems with Post-OCR Triage for eMOP Proceedings Article In: Proc. Digital Humanities Conference, 2014. @inproceedings{christy2014emopdhc,
title = {Diagnosing Page Image Problems with Post-OCR Triage for eMOP},
author = {M Christy and L Auvil and R Gutierrez-Osuna and B Capitanu and A Gupta and E Grumbach},
year = {2014},
date = {2014-07-08},
booktitle = {Proc. Digital Humanities Conference},
volume = {in press},
keywords = {OCR, Other, Pattern recognition},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {inproceedings}
}
|
Avnet, M S; Phillips, D; Bhattacharya, R; Gutierrez-Osuna, R; Malak, R; Mayer, R; Ntaimo, L; Quadrifoglio, L; Tsvetkov, P Toward an Interdisciplinary Program in Systems Engineering at Texas A&M University Proceedings Article In: Proc. 4th International Engineering Systems Symposium (CESUN 2014), 2014. @inproceedings{avnet2014systemsEngr,
title = {Toward an Interdisciplinary Program in Systems Engineering at Texas A&M University},
author = {M S Avnet and D Phillips and R Bhattacharya and R Gutierrez-Osuna and R Malak and R Mayer and L Ntaimo and L Quadrifoglio and P Tsvetkov},
year = {2014},
date = {2014-06-08},
booktitle = {Proc. 4th International Engineering Systems Symposium (CESUN 2014)},
keywords = {Other},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {inproceedings}
}
|
Perera-Lluna, A; Manivannan, K; Xu, P; Gutierrez-Osuna, R; Benner, C; Russell, B D Automatic Capacitor Bank Identification in Power Distribution Systems Journal Article In: Electric Power Systems Research, vol. in press, 2014. @article{alex2014epsr,
title = {Automatic Capacitor Bank Identification in Power Distribution Systems},
author = {A Perera-Lluna and K Manivannan and P Xu and R Gutierrez-Osuna and C Benner and B D Russell},
url = {https://psi.engr.tamu.edu/wp-content/uploads/2018/01/alex2014epsr.pdf},
year = {2014},
date = {2014-02-06},
journal = {Electric Power Systems Research},
volume = {in press},
keywords = {Other, Pattern recognition},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
|
2009
|
Pazarloglou, A; George, S; Stoleru, R; Gutierrez-Osuna, R Demo abstract: Signal reconstruction with subnyquist sampling using wireless sensor networks Conference International Conference on Information Processing in Sensor Networks, IEEE 2009. @conference{pazarloglou2009demo,
title = {Demo abstract: Signal reconstruction with subnyquist sampling using wireless sensor networks},
author = {A Pazarloglou and S George and R Stoleru and R Gutierrez-Osuna},
url = {https://psi.engr.tamu.edu/wp-content/uploads/2018/01/pazarloglou2009demo.pdf},
year = {2009},
date = {2009-01-01},
booktitle = {International Conference on Information Processing in Sensor Networks},
pages = {423--424},
organization = {IEEE},
abstract = {Data streaming for sensor networks is an emerging class of application that can offer significant safety and utility enhancements in a number of critical environments. In one such application, disaster response, a wireless sensor network may assist in the detection of living victims trapped in collapsed buildings. As a step towards this goal, this paper addresses the very high bandwidth and processing requirements posed by streaming applications, and demonstrates a sub-Nyquist sampling procedure for reconstructing higher-resolution speech signals.},
keywords = {Other},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {conference}
}
Data streaming for sensor networks is an emerging class of application that can offer significant safety and utility enhancements in a number of critical environments. In one such application, disaster response, a wireless sensor network may assist in the detection of living victims trapped in collapsed buildings. As a step towards this goal, this paper addresses the very high bandwidth and processing requirements posed by streaming applications, and demonstrates a sub-Nyquist sampling procedure for reconstructing higher-resolution speech signals. |
2001
|
Garcia, O N; Gutierrez-Osuna, R An Updated Approach to Complexity from an Agent-Centered Artificial Intelligence Perspective Book Chapter In: Encyclopedia of Library and Information Science (ELIS), vol. 68, pp. 346-366, 2001. @inbook{garcia2001complexity,
title = {An Updated Approach to Complexity from an Agent-Centered Artificial Intelligence Perspective},
author = {O N Garcia and R Gutierrez-Osuna},
url = {https://psi.engr.tamu.edu/wp-content/uploads/2018/01/garcia2001complexity.pdf},
year = {2001},
date = {2001-01-01},
booktitle = {Encyclopedia of Library and Information Science (ELIS)},
volume = {68},
pages = {346-366},
abstract = {Here we update and expand our previous work to find commonality in a variety of systems, situations, and organisms with regard to a generic concept of complexity (1). Such attempts have drawn significant attention from outstanding researchers of diverse backgrounds (2). Despite years of research with many papers written, there is yet to appear a convergence toward a unified methodology in the multi-disciplinary approaches. In particular, we consider how the synthesis of complex systems, as is practiced in the software engineering of large systems, sheds light on the analysis of complexity. We consider how levels of abstraction at different granularities relate to complexity from the point of view of the description of a model of the system. We consider also the relationship of an intelligent agent, symbolic or biological, with the estimation of complexity. We use the term agent to include both intelligent programs and humans, which learn systems (models) from observations and adapt to their environment by learning. It is suggested here that an agent-centered approach, factoring complexity modulo a context (called in Artificial Intelligence a perspective), may provide a more general approach to determining the complexity of an object or system. The thesis presented here is that the object must not be considered independently from its user agent and its context and that in the duality of the consideration, one may learn more about both the general characteristics of complexity and of the specific reasons for our interest in it. The proposal is to consider user, interaction, and the related interfaces simultaneously when studying the complexity of a system. This approach is more integrative and less reductionist than studying any of the system aspects individually and bridges the difficulties of a large range of diverse settings. An overview of the field is briefly presented in light of the proposed approach.},
keywords = {Other},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {inbook}
}
Here we update and expand our previous work to find commonality in a variety of systems, situations, and organisms with regard to a generic concept of complexity (1). Such attempts have drawn significant attention from outstanding researchers of diverse backgrounds (2). Despite years of research with many papers written, there is yet to appear a convergence toward a unified methodology in the multi-disciplinary approaches. In particular, we consider how the synthesis of complex systems, as is practiced in the software engineering of large systems, sheds light on the analysis of complexity. We consider how levels of abstraction at different granularities relate to complexity from the point of view of the description of a model of the system. We consider also the relationship of an intelligent agent, symbolic or biological, with the estimation of complexity. We use the term agent to include both intelligent programs and humans, which learn systems (models) from observations and adapt to their environment by learning. It is suggested here that an agent-centered approach, factoring complexity modulo a context (called in Artificial Intelligence a perspective), may provide a more general approach to determining the complexity of an object or system. The thesis presented here is that the object must not be considered independently from its user agent and its context and that in the duality of the consideration, one may learn more about both the general characteristics of complexity and of the specific reasons for our interest in it. The proposal is to consider user, interaction, and the related interfaces simultaneously when studying the complexity of a system. This approach is more integrative and less reductionist than studying any of the system aspects individually and bridges the difficulties of a large range of diverse settings. An overview of the field is briefly presented in light of the proposed approach. |
2000
|
Gutierrez-Osuna, R; Garcia, O N An application of Rissanen’s Complexity Measure to Optimizing Abstraction Level Conference Proceedings of the 5th Annual Conference on Human Interaction with Complex Systems, 2000. @conference{gutierrezapplication,
title = {An application of Rissanen’s Complexity Measure to Optimizing Abstraction Level},
author = {R Gutierrez-Osuna and O N Garcia},
url = {https://psi.engr.tamu.edu/wp-content/uploads/2018/01/gutierrez2000application.pdf},
year = {2000},
date = {2000-05-02},
booktitle = {Proceedings of the 5th Annual Conference on Human Interaction with Complex Systems},
abstract = {In previous work we have considered the usercentered complexity of a hierarchy of abstractions as observed from a user’s perspective. We hypothesized that, given a perspective, there should be a variety of complexities depending on the granularity of the abstraction and the measure of complexity chosen. In this paper we consider an optimization based on the Minimum Description Length complexity measure and its implications for choosing the proper level of abstraction.},
keywords = {Other},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {conference}
}
In previous work we have considered the usercentered complexity of a hierarchy of abstractions as observed from a user’s perspective. We hypothesized that, given a perspective, there should be a variety of complexities depending on the granularity of the abstraction and the measure of complexity chosen. In this paper we consider an optimization based on the Minimum Description Length complexity measure and its implications for choosing the proper level of abstraction. |