P. Swarnalatha

Work place: School of Computing Sciences and Engineering, VIT University, Vellore 632014, TN, INDIA

E-mail: pswarnalatha@vit.ac.in

Website:

Research Interests: Computer systems and computational processes, Artificial Intelligence, Image Processing

Biography

Swarnalatha Purushotham is an Assistant Professor (Sr), in the school of computing sciences and engineering, VIT University, at Vellore, India. She is pursuing her Ph.D degree in Intelligent Systems.  She has published more than 20 papers in international journals/international conference proceedings. She is having 10 years of teaching experiences. She is a member of IACSIT, CSI, ACM, IACSIT, IEEE (WIE). Her current research interest includes Image Processing, Remote Sensing and Artificial Intelligence.

Author Articles
A Centroid Model for the Depth Assessment of Images using Rough Fuzzy Set Techniques

By P. Swarnalatha B.K. Tripathy

DOI: https://doi.org/10.5815/ijisa.2012.03.03, Pub. Date: 8 Apr. 2012

Detection of affected areas in images is a crucial step in assessing the depth of the affected area for municipal operators. These affected areas in the underground images, which are line images are indicative of the condition of buried infrastructures like sewers and water mains. These images identify affected areas and extract their properties like structures from the images, whose contrast has been enhanced... A Centroid Model for the Depth Assessment of Images using Rough Fuzzy Set Techniques presents a three step method which is a simple, robust and efficient one to detect affected areas in the underground concrete images. The proposed methodology is to use segmentation and feature extraction using structural elements. The main objective for using this model is to find the dimensions of the affected areas such as the length, width, depth and the type of the defects/affected areas. Although human eye is extremely effective at recognition and classification, it is not suitable for assessing defects in images, which might have spread over thousands of miles of image lines. The reasons are mainly fatigue, subjectivity and cost. Our objective is to reduce the effort and the labour of a person in detecting the affected areas in underground images. A proposal to apply rough fuzzy set theory to compute the lower and upper approximations of the affected area of the image is made in this paper. In this connection we propose to use some concepts and technology developed by Pal and Maji.

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