European researchers have developed HERMES, a software surveillance system that automatically detects human motion, behavior, and facial expressions; generates a running commentary of what is happening; and virtually re-enacts events. HERMES consists of a scalable, flexible platform, which integrates software components that can detect events in real time and describe them semantically. The HERMES tracking technology functions like a human watching the same scene, making predictions about where a target is heading and reacting to other unusual events. The system can track people as they walk across a city with a combination of static cameras and pan-tilt-zoom cameras. Generating semantic information from video has led to the development of a tool that creates a virtual three-dimensional representation of the scene. “The virtual graphical representation of the footage is generated in near real time and can be displayed alongside the actual video stream,” says Universitat Autonoma senior researcher Andrew Bagdanov.
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Software: Running Commentary for Smarter Surveillance? |
by sparky3887
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UIC Researcher Looks Toward a Communication Revolution |
by sparky3887
Andy Johnson, a professor in the University of Illinois at Chicago’s Electronic Visualization Laboratory, is developing ultra-high-speed connections paired with high-definition video collaboration. Johnson says the technology is similar to commercial video phone services, but is more reliable, larger, and has a much clearer display. A stable, high-resolution video connection could change how people consult with doctors, auto mechanics diagnose cars, or businesspeople hold meetings, he says. The technology pairs life-sized display screens with near-instant Internet connections. “That gives us a much higher resolution interaction, and could make it much easier for remote groups to work together,” Johnson says. However, the system will require the United States to upgrade its Internet infrastructure with fiber-optic cables to increase access speeds.
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5 (More) Google Labs Projects That Should Be on Your Radar |
by sparky3887
Google Labs has recently developed or acquired several new application and tool prototypes. For example, Aardvark is a social search tool that can find answers to users’ questions by asking people in their networks. Users can access Aardvark via the Web, instant messenger programs, Twitter, and iPhone applications. Google’s Public Data Explorer aims to make datasets easy to communicate and explore. The tool enables users to preview how the information in datasets has changed over time. Gesture search is a tool specifically for Android phones designed to help users quickly find a contact or application from all the items stored in the phone by drawing a letter of the alphabet on the touchscreen, which eliminates the need to rely on the keyboard for search purposes. Google Reader Play is a way to browse articles, blogs, and other items on the Web. The program identifies the most interesting pages on the Internet using the recommended items feed in Reader. Follow Finder is the first Twitter tool that Google has released. The tool analyzes public social graph information on Twitter to find people a user might want to follow.
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UK Competition Aims to Find Future Cyber-Security Experts |
by sparky3887
A group of businesses, police, and government organizations in Great Britain have launched the Cyber Security Challenge UK as part of an effort to improve cybersecurity in the country. Challenge participants will take tests on how to defend networks and identify security vulnerabilities in Web site code, among other things, to determine whether they have the skills needed for a career in cybersecurity. Those who pass the tests will then undergo head-to-head challenges. Participants who do well on the challenges may then be eligible to receive training and scholarships so that they can further develop their cybersecurity skills. The launch of the Cyber Security Challenge UK comes in the wake of the release of a report from the House of Lords that found that future wars will increasingly involve cyberattacks. The report also criticized other European nations for not doing enough to boost cybersecurity.
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NIST Develops ‘Dimmer Switch’ for Superconducting Quantum Computing |
by sparky3887
National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) researchers have developed a “dimmer switch” for a superconducting circuit that links a quantum bit and a quantum resonant cavity, known as a bus, which could be used to store and transport information in quantum computers. The researchers say the device can tune interactions between these components and could help accelerate the development of a practical quantum computer. The advance could allow researchers to control the interactions between many circuit elements. The NIST switch is the first to produce predictable quantum behavior over time with the controllable exchange of an individual microwave photon between a qubit and a bus. “We have three different elements all working together, coherently, and without losing a lot of energy,” says Colorado University-Boulder’s Michael Allman, who performed the experiments with NIST physicist Ray Simmonds.
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Underground Lab Could Help Address Modern Science Queries |
by sparky3887
The U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF) demonstrated the possibilities of high-performance research and education networks at the recent spring Internet2 meeting using a videoconference that connected attendees to the former Homestake Gold Mine near Lead, S.D. The mine is a possible site for the Deep Underground Science and Engineering Lab (DUSEL), where physicists, biologists, and geologists could conduct research regarding matter, energy, and the Earth. DUSEL experiments would generate large volumes of data that could be distributed to researchers around the world, says South Dakota Board of Regents’ Claude Garelik. He noted that live videoconference links are not new to the education community. “High definition is new technology to the industry, but we have been doing videoconferencing for a long time.” DUSEL would be an interdisciplinary science lab created to study basic questions of modern science, such as the nature of dark matter and energy. NSF is evaluating design options for large-scale DUSEL facilities and construction could begin by 2014, says University of California, Berkeley’s Kevin Lesko.
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R&D Plus Wizardry |
by sparky3887
University of Southern California (USC) graduate students recently demonstrated new communication and digital media tools at the annual Annenberg Graduate Fellows Symposium. USC’s Logan Olson and Joseph Osborn displayed an application that enables musicians to layer sound tracks by intersecting hand-drawn lines on Microsoft’s Surface display and control the volume by drawing an arc across any combination of tracks. Another application allows the user to design and rearrange flow charts and other diagrams to use during brainstorming meetings and presentations. USC’s Bryan Jaycox developed SolidSpace, a glove that lets wearers feel distant objects through pressure on their fingers. Transmitters on the glove emit radio waves and measure the distance of objects by the time it takes for the waves to bounce back. The glove is part of a group of projects called Redesigning Perception, which includes augmented reality goggles that map additional information onto objects in a room and an audio device that lets users hear sounds outside the range of human perception.
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NIST: Federal R&D Boosts Industry |
by sparky3887
The U.S. National Institute of Standards and Technology’s (NIST’s) annual report details innovations developed by federal labs and private-sector organizations. Eleven federal agencies have laboratory operations that engage in research and development work with organizations in industry, academia, the nonprofit sector, and state and local governments on improvement projects. Collaboration between federal laboratories and other organizations was on the rise and resulted in technology that benefited various business sectors, according to the report. NIST developed software called Building for Environmental and Economic Sustainability (BEES), which includes environmental and economical performance data for more than 230 construction projects and is designed to reduce complex technical content about building materials. Another project involved researchers from the U.S. Department of Agriculture and the Agriculture Research Service, which designed the BeadChip, a chip that examines cattle’s genetic makeup to create higher quality beef and dairy products.
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Immersive Exhibit Redefines Bird’s-Eye View |
by sparky3887
ACM’s SIGGRAPH 2009 conference in August featured an exhibit that enabled visitors to experience the various levels of vision and hearing of animals, such as the ultraviolet vision of birds or the ultrasonic hearing of whales. Computer scientists at Texas A&M University worked with the university’s fine arts expert Carol LaFayette on the virtual environment program, “I’m Not There.” Professor Fred Parke developed the system, which requires participants to don three-dimensional glasses and use a Wii controller to navigate through the immersive exhibit. He also is working on a liquid-crystal display version of the system. The virtual environment was enhanced by surround-sound recordings of animals in the wild and scenes set on Cocos Island, located southwest of Costa Rica. “The Viz lab is about the synthesis between art and science, so we inserted artistic elements into these scenes to make them more realistic and interesting,” LaFayette says. She believes science and natural history museums could use such technology to enhance the experience for visitors. “Think of all the exhibits that could come to life–and in a very green way,” she says.
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NSF Awards Wetzel & Lechler $144,000 for 2-Year Information Security Management Study |
by sparky3887
Stevens Institute of Technology professors Susanne Wetzel and Thomas Lechler have received a two-year, $144,038 U.S. National Science Foundation grant to study advanced problems in managing information security. Wetzel and Lechler say their project has the potential for significant practical and theoretical progress in information security management. “During the past decade, research in information security has expanded from a purely technical focus to a more general technology-economic focus,” the researchers say. “Despite its expansion, a multidisciplinary approach to understand and theoretically explain the interaction of security and economy within complex systems of partners is still missing.” The project’s primary objective is to develop an interdisciplinary information security framework to optimize and advance both system information security and system productivity. The researchers give the example of a hospital that exchanges patient data records with governmental data and insurance companies. “This may allow an insurance company to combine and deduce information from different data sources that could pose a security threat which is not addressed by traditional security considerations,” they say. “From a security economics perspective, the impact of information exchange between partners on their productivity has to be considered to understand the conditions under which partners will obey or violate information security policies.”
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