Academic literature on the topic 'Articulated ICP'

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Journal articles on the topic "Articulated ICP"

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Tagliasacchi, Andrea, Matthias Schröder, Anastasia Tkach, Sofien Bouaziz, Mario Botsch, and Mark Pauly. "Robust Articulated-ICP for Real-Time Hand Tracking." Computer Graphics Forum 34, no. 5 (August 2015): 101–14. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/cgf.12700.

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Corazza, Stefano, Lars Mündermann, Emiliano Gambaretto, Giancarlo Ferrigno, and Thomas P. Andriacchi. "Markerless Motion Capture through Visual Hull, Articulated ICP and Subject Specific Model Generation." International Journal of Computer Vision 87, no. 1-2 (September 2, 2009): 156–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11263-009-0284-3.

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White, Matt A., and Nicolás E. Campione. "A three-dimensional approach to visualize pairwise morphological variation and its application to fragmentary palaeontological specimens." PeerJ 9 (January 19, 2021): e10545. http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.10545.

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Classifying isolated vertebrate bones to a high level of taxonomic precision can be difficult. Many of Australia’s Cretaceous terrestrial vertebrate fossil-bearing deposits, for example, produce large numbers of isolated bones and very few associated or articulated skeletons. Identifying these often fragmentary remains beyond high-level taxonomic ranks, such as Ornithopoda or Theropoda, is difficult and those classified to lower taxonomic levels are often debated. The ever-increasing accessibility to 3D-based comparative techniques has allowed palaeontologists to undertake a variety of shape analyses, such as geometric morphometrics, that although powerful and often ideal, require the recognition of diagnostic landmarks and the generation of sufficiently large data sets to detect clusters and accurately describe major components of morphological variation. As a result, such approaches are often outside the scope of basic palaeontological research that aims to simply identify fragmentary specimens. Herein we present a workflow in which pairwise comparisons between fragmentary fossils and better known exemplars are digitally achieved through three-dimensional mapping of their surface profiles and the iterative closest point (ICP) algorithm. To showcase this methodology, we compared a fragmentary theropod ungual (NMV P186153) from Victoria, Australia, identified as a neovenatorid, with the manual unguals of the megaraptoran Australovenator wintonensis (AODF604). We discovered that NMV P186153 was a near identical match to AODF604 manual ungual II-3, differing only in size, which, given their 10–15Ma age difference, suggests stasis in megaraptoran ungual morphology throughout this interval. Although useful, our approach is not free of subjectivity; care must be taken to eliminate the effects of broken and incomplete surfaces and identify the human errors incurred during scaling, such as through replication. Nevertheless, this approach will help to evaluate and identify fragmentary remains, adding a quantitative perspective to an otherwise qualitative endeavour.
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Leidersdorf, Craig B., Peter E. Gadd, and William G. McDougal. "ARTICULATED CONCRETE MAT SLOPE PROTECTION." Coastal Engineering Proceedings 1, no. 21 (January 29, 1988): 177. http://dx.doi.org/10.9753/icce.v21.177.

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This paper provides guidance for the design, fabrication, and installation of articulated concrete mat slope protection. Although articulated mat armor has been utilized for many years in low-energy wave environments, it has been extended recently to accommodate intermediate wave energies and severe ice loads. The development of the concept is discussed, after which hydraulic design considerations, material design considerations, and fabrication and installation techniques are presented. Prototype performance is reviewed. It is concluded that articulated concrete mat armor is capable of providing effective slope protection in intermediate-energy wave environments, and that additional research is required relating to hydraulic stability and failure modes under wave and ice loading.
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Agrawal, Rajeev, Koushik Kabiraj, and Ravi Singh. "Modeling a Controller for an Articulated Robotic Arm." Intelligent Control and Automation 03, no. 03 (2012): 207–10. http://dx.doi.org/10.4236/ica.2012.33023.

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Bruening, Dustin A., and James G. Richards. "The Effects of Articulated Figure Skates on Jump Landing Forces." Journal of Applied Biomechanics 22, no. 4 (November 2006): 285–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.1123/jab.22.4.285.

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Lower extremity injuries in figure skating have long been linked to skating boot stiffness, and recent increases in jump practice time may be influencing the frequency and seriousness of these injuries. It is hypothesized that stiff boots compromise skaters' abilities to attenuate jump landing forces. Decreasing boot stiffness by adding an articulation at the ankle may reduce the rate and magnitude of landing forces. Prototype articulated figure skating boots were tested in this study to determine their effectiveness in enabling skaters to land with lower peak impact forces. Nine competitive figure skaters, who trained in standard boots and subsequently in articulated boots, performed off-ice jump simulations and on-ice axels, double toe loops, and double axels. Analysis of the off-ice simulations showed decreases in peak heel force and loading rate with use of the articulated boot, although the exact kinematic mechanisms responsible for these decreases are still unclear. Analysis of the on-ice jumps revealed few kinematic differences between boot types, implying that the skaters did not use the articulation. Greater adaptation and training time is likely needed for the results seen off-ice to transfer to difficult on-ice jumps.
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WALLS, A. W. G., R. W. WASSELL, and J. G. STEELE. "A comparison of two methods for locating the intercuspal position (ICP) whilst mounting casts on an articulator." Journal of Oral Rehabilitation 18, no. 1 (January 1991): 43–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2842.1991.tb00028.x.

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Parlett, Kate, and Amy Sander. "Into the Void: A Counsel Perspective on the Need to Articulate Rules Concerning Disclosure Before the ICJ." Proceedings of the ASIL Annual Meeting 113 (2019): 219–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/amp.2019.180.

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Individuals appearing before the International Court of Justice (ICJ or Court) are not subject under international law to any compulsory code of conduct which would guide them in navigating issues of professional ethics. Neither the ICJ Statute nor its Rules impose any qualification requirements on counsel. In practice, legal teams appearing before the Court are comprised of individuals from different legal backgrounds, who tend to be either qualified legal practitioners or academics. Qualified practitioners may be subject to professional codes of conduct from their home jurisdiction, but these can vary considerably across different jurisdictions. Counsel who are academics or are not admitted in any jurisdiction may not be subject to any conduct rules.
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Parlett, Kate, and Amy Sander. "Into the Void: A Counsel Perspective on the Need to Articulate Rules Concerning Disclosure Before the ICJ." AJIL Unbound 113 (2019): 302–6. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/aju.2019.37.

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Individuals appearing before the ICJ on behalf of states are not subject under international law to any compulsory code of conduct to guide them in navigating issues of professional ethics. Article 42(2) of the ICJ Statute merely provides that parties “may have the assistance of counsel or advocates before the Court” and does not impose qualification requirements on those a state elects to appear on its behalf. In practice, legal teams appearing before the Court are comprised of individuals from different legal backgrounds who are either qualified legal practitioners or academics (referred to below as “counsel”). Qualified practitioners will likely be subject to professional codes of conduct applicable to them in their home jurisdiction, and those codes of conduct may bind them in relation to proceedings before the ICJ. But the professional obligations applying to practitioners from different jurisdictions can vary considerably. Some may consider that their domestic code of conduct does not (and/or should not) bind counsel before an international court. Those who are academics or are not admitted in any jurisdiction may not be subject to any conduct rules when acting as counsel. The absence of a common set of professional obligations means that the obligations bearing upon the conduct of particular counsel are unclear and certainly not uniform. This may have an impact on the presentation of a case before the Court, and in turn on the Court's understanding of the dispute. Ultimately, it could materially impact the outcome of a case.
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Corrêa, Ianca Zany Nunes, Erika Akiko Moura Shiota, Ely Moacyr De Souza Portela, Gabriel Garcia Bardales, Francisco Pantoja Braga, and Cristiane Maria Brasil Leal. "Tratamento reabilitador com prótese total imediata maxilar e prótese parcial removível mandibular." Prosthesis and Esthetics in Science 9, no. 35 (2020): 32–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.24077/2020;935:3239.

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Immediate complete denture (ICD) is a mucosa-supported prosthesis manufactured before the removal of natural teeth and installed soon after their extraction. This paper aims to describe a clinical case of oral rehabilitation with upper ICD and lower removable partial denture (RPD). A 57-year-old female patient sought treatment with dissatisfaction with her aesthetics and mobility of the upper teeth. After anamnesis, intra and extra-oral examinations, radiographic examination and analysis of study models mounted on a semi-adjustable articulator, periodontal pockets were found in the upper teeth and extensive bone loss. So, upper tooth extraction, superior ICD and lower RPD were indicated as treatment. For ICD preparation, anatomical and functional moldings were made, made up of orientation and intermaxillary relationship plans for the assembly of the semi-djustable articulator models. The remaining upper teeth were removed from the model for assembly of the artificial teeth and the ICD was polymerized and polished. The lower RPD was made following the standard steps. After dentures manufacturing, the surgery for upper tooth extraction was performed and prostheses installed immediately after surgery. The results demonstrated that the performed treatment provided aesthetic, phonetic, and functional restoration to the patient avoiding her to undergo a period of edentulism. It was concluded that ICD is a good indication for prosthetic rehabilitation of patients with advanced periodontitis, whose planning is the exodontia of all the teeth of an arch.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Articulated ICP"

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MOSCHINI, Davide. "Tracking human motion with multiple cameras using articulated ICP with hard constraints." Doctoral thesis, Università degli Studi di Verona, 2009. http://hdl.handle.net/11562/337383.

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Questa tesi propone un nuovo algoritmo basato su ICP per il tracking di un modello scheletrico articolato di un corpo umano. L’algoritmo proposto prende in input immagini calibrate di un soggetto, calcola la ricostruzione volumetrica e la linea mediale del corpo e quindi posiziona in modo adeguato il modello, composto di segmenti, in ogni frame usando una versione di ICP modificata (versione che usa una strategia di attraversamento alberi gerarchica che mantiene connessi tutti i segmenti del modello nei giunti relativi). L’approccio proposto usa limiti cinematica per i giunti e un filtro di Kalman esteso per fare il tracking del modello. Il primo contributo originale di questa tesi è l’algoritmo per trovare i punti sullo scheletro di un volume tridimensionale. L’algoritmo, usando una tecnica di slicing trova l’asse mediale di un volume 3D in modo veloce utilizzando il processore della scheda grafica e le texture units della scheda stessa. Questo algoritmo produce ottimi risultati per quanto riguarda la qualità e le prestazioni se comparato con altri algoritmi in letteratura. Un altro contributo originale è l’introduzione di una nuova strategia di tracking basata su un approccio gerarchico dell’algoritmo ICP, utilizzato per trovare le congruenze tra un modello di corpo umano composto da soli segmenti e un insieme di punti 3D. L’algoritmo usa una versione di ICP dove tutti i punti 3D sono pesati in funzione del segmento del corpo preso in considerazione dall’algoritmo in quel momento. L’applicazione di queste tecniche dimostra la bontà del metodo e le prestazioni ottenute in termini di qualità della stima della posa sono comparabili con altri lavori in letteratura. I risultati presentati nella tesi dimostrano la fattibilità dell’approccio generale, che si intende utilizzare in un sistema completo per il tracking di corpi umani senza l’uso di marcatori. In futuro il lavoro può essere esteso ottimizzando l’implementazione e la codifica in modo da poter ottenere prestazioni real-time.
This thesis proposed a new ICP-based algorithm for tracking articulated skeletal model of a human body. The proposed algorithm takes as input multiple calibrated views of the subject, computes a volumetric reconstruction and the centerlines of the body and fits the skeletal body model in each frame using a hierarchic tree traversal version of the ICP algorithm that preserves the connection of the segments at the joints. The proposed approach uses the kinematic constraints and an Extended Kalman Filter to track the body pose. The first contribution is a new algorithm to find the skeletal points of a 3D volume. The algorithm using a slicing technique find the medial axis of a volume in a fast way using the graphic card processor and the texture units. This algorithm produce good results in quality and performance compared to other works in literature. Another contribution is the introduction of a new tracking strategy based on a hierarchical application of the ICP standard algorithm to find the match between a stick body model and a set of 3D points. The algorithm use a traversing version of ICP where also all the 3D points are weighted in such a way every limbs of the model can best fit on the right portion of the body. The application of these techniques shown the feasibility of the method and the performances obtained in terms of quality of estimate pose are comparable with other works in literature. The results presented here demonstrate the feasibility of the approach, which is is intended to be used in complete system for vision-based markerless human body tracking. Future work will aimed at optimizing the implementation, in order to achieve real-time performances.
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Yang-chin-yi and 楊景翊. "Effect of Ice Compress on Articulatio Sternoclavicularis of Sternocleidomastoid on the Balance of Weight Lifting Athletes." Thesis, 2011. http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/56987702111468513671.

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碩士
臺北巿立體育學院
運動技術研究所
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Purpose: The purpose of the study was to explore differences of balance and neck fitness between weight lifting athletes and non-athletic university students. Changes on balance functions and neck fitness were observed after ice compress on articulatio sternoclavicularis of sternocleidomastoid. Methods: Sensory Organization Test was administered with Computerized Dynamic Posturography using Smart Balance Master, and microFET3 was used to test isometric strength and active joint range of motion on six different directions of the neck. Posttest was conducted after ice compress using an ice bag. Results: 1. Significant differences of main effect were found on all conditions and total scores of sensory organization between pre and post tests regarding time. All subjects were found to have a significant interaction in condition 5, and balance scores and total scores were increased after ice compress. Ice compress was more effective on university students in condition 5. 2. All subjects had higher maximal isometric strength after ice compress in all directions. Weight lifting athletes had higher isometric strength than university students before ice compress, and ice compress was more effective on flex and rotation on weight lifting athletes. 3. All subjects had better active joint range of motion after ice compress in all directions. Except flex, weight lifting athletes had better range of motion than university students before ice compress, and flex active joint range of motion was not enhanced after ice compress. Conclusion: Neck muscle strength, balance, and neck range of motion of weight lifting athletes were enhanced after ice compress, especially in neck muscle strength and balance. Therefore, ice compress is helpful for neck injury prevention, and further enhance weight lifting performance. Ice compress as a neck protection is suggested after training routines for weight lifting athletes for the effects of protection and performance enhancement. Keyword: maximal isometric strength, joint range of motion, sensory organization
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Books on the topic "Articulated ICP"

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Catherine, Brölmann. 5 Obligations of International Organizations, 5.2 Interpretation of the Agreement of 25 March 1951 between the WHO and Egypt , Advisory Opinion, [1980] ICJ Rep 73. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/law/9780198743620.003.0026.

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The 1980 WHO Advisory Opinion elaborates on the general legal obligations (grounded in the duty of co-operation and good faith) that are part of the relationship between an international organization and its host state. In this opinion the ICJ possibly for the first time articulated this relationship as a set of mutual obligations between legal equals. The opinion moreover enunciates the sources of international legal obligations binding upon international organizations (IOs): the treaties they conclude (uncontroversial); I customary international law; their constitutions. The Court uses the proverbial reassurance of UN member states in saying that the WHO is not a ‘super-state’. Finally, in accepting jurisdiction the Court explicitly separated the legal character of the question from the political considerations motivated by that question.
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Book chapters on the topic "Articulated ICP"

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Ben Ghorbel, Mahdi, Malek Baklouti, and Serge Couvet. "3D Head Pose Estimation and Tracking Using Particle Filtering and ICP Algorithm." In Articulated Motion and Deformable Objects, 224–37. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-14061-7_22.

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Droeschel, David, and Sven Behnke. "3D Body Pose Estimation Using an Adaptive Person Model for Articulated ICP." In Intelligent Robotics and Applications, 157–67. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-25489-5_16.

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Karim, Asif K., and G. A. Shanmugha Sundaram. "Optimisation of Articulated Vehicular RADAR Antenna Array Parameters Using Machine Learning Algorithms." In ICT Analysis and Applications, 517–26. Singapore: Springer Singapore, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-15-8354-4_51.

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Arndt, Agnes. "Feeling Political Through Law: The Emergence of an International Criminal Jurisdiction, 1899–2019." In Feeling Political, 91–119. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-89858-8_4.

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AbstractScaling up to the International Criminal Court (ICC), this chapter contributes a study on the emotionality and emotion work leading up to its founding. Like bureaucracy, international criminal jurisprudence is designed to be strictly neutral, apolitical, and unemotional. At the same time, it faces a challenge in reconciling globally differing feelings about what constitutes justice and how it should be administered. Drawing on the role played by Benjamin Ferencz, chief prosecutor at the Nuremberg Military Tribunals, in the establishing the ICC, this chapter examines how emotions were present from the outset in the discussions about the court’s jurisdiction: the institutionalization of the ICC was a reaction to individually and collectively articulated emotions.
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MacKenzie, Scott. "The Creative Treatment of Alterity: Nanook as the North." In Films on Ice. Edinburgh University Press, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9780748694174.003.0015.

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This chapter examines the many re-iterations of Robert Flaherty’s influential film Nanook of the North (1922) to show how this key documentary film has been re-imagined and re-articulated in documentaries such as Claude Massot’s Nanook Revisited (1990), feature length fictional accounts of Flaherty’s journey north such as Massot’s Kabloonak (1994), indigenous media such as the National Film Board of Canada’s Netsilik series (1967), IMAX films like To the Arctic (2012) and experimental cinema such as Philip Hoffman and Sami van Ingen’s Sweep (1995). Through the analysis of these varied works, MacKenzie delineates how the continual re-iterations of Nanook of the North play and complex and conflicted role in the popular imagination of the Arctic.
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Kato, Makoto, Gang Xu, and Yen-Wei Che. "Articulated Hand Tracking by ICA-based Hand Model and Multiple Cameras." In Scene Reconstruction Pose Estimation and Tracking. I-Tech Education and Publishing, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.5772/4949.

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Healy, Mike. "Alienation and Work: ICT Professionals." In Marx and Digital Machines: Alienation, Technology, Capitalism, 39–57. University of Westminster Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.16997/book47.d.

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This chapter surveys the effectiveness of Marx’s theory of alienation by examining the experiences of ICT professionals within the workplace. This chapter studies whether Marx’s theory helps in creating the conditions to enable ICT professionals to articulate their working lives as they see them, within the general trends of the sector, and to theorise their experiences. The author first describes the participants of his setting, before going on to consider the meaning of professionalism for them. Next, the chapter examines previous and existing research into ICT professionals, defining the key characteristics that shape the ICT industry. It then takes this overarching environment and applies it to the ICT professionals who took part in his own research presenting a distillation of their verbatim views about their own work and experiences touching on practices such as work process engineering, ‘benching’, ‘body shopping’ and how management of their labour functions. The author concludes that the power structures within which ICT professionals work shapes the products they produce, further emphasising that technology and its development are primarily advancing the interests of capital contributing to professionals’ expressions and experiences of alienation.
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Ifijeh, Goodluck, Jerome Idiegbeyan-Ose, Chidi D. Isiakpona, and Julie Ilogho. "Disaster and Digital Libraries in Developing Countries." In Library Science and Administration, 988–1015. IGI Global, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-5225-3914-8.ch047.

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Digital libraries have become a modern day phenomenon. Their roles in information generation,organization, dissemination and storage cannot be overemphasized. This chapter articulates the importance of digital libraries and the need to preserve them from disasters. It highlights the causes and effects of disasters in digital libraries. Prevention and management of disasters were also discussed. Issues and challenges around information and communication technology (ICT), that has direct bearings on digital libraries and disaster management in developing countries were raised. In addition, recommendations were made on how to improve on disaster prevention and control.
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Ifijeh, Goodluck, Jerome Idiegbeyan-Ose, Chidi D. Isiakpona, and Julie Ilogho. "Disaster and Digital Libraries in Developing Countries." In Advances in Library and Information Science, 534–59. IGI Global, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-4666-8624-3.ch023.

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Digital libraries have become a modern day phenomenon. Their roles in information generation,organization, dissemination and storage cannot be overemphasized. This chapter articulates the importance of digital libraries and the need to preserve them from disasters. It highlights the causes and effects of disasters in digital libraries. Prevention and management of disasters were also discussed. Issues and challenges around information and communication technology (ICT), that has direct bearings on digital libraries and disaster management in developing countries were raised. In addition, recommendations were made on how to improve on disaster prevention and control.
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Ifijeh, Goodluck, Jerome Idiegbeyan-Ose, Chidi Segun-Adeniran, and Julie Ilogho. "Disaster Management in Digital Libraries." In Emergency and Disaster Management, 1556–71. IGI Global, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-5225-6195-8.ch073.

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The role of digital libraries in information generation,organization, dissemination and storage cannot be overemphasized. This article articulates the importance of digital libraries and the need to preserve them from disasters. It highlights the causes and effects of disasters in digital libraries. Prevention and management of disasters were also discussed. Issues and challenges around information and communication technology (ICT), that has direct bearings on digital libraries and disaster management in developing countries were raised. In addition, recommendations were made on how to improve on disaster prevention and control.
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Conference papers on the topic "Articulated ICP"

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Fleishman, Shachar, Mark Kliger, Alon Lerner, and Gershom Kutliroff. "ICPIK: Inverse Kinematics based articulated-ICP." In 2015 IEEE Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition Workshops (CVPRW). IEEE, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/cvprw.2015.7301345.

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Baek, Seongmin, and Younhee Gil. "Human Pose Estimation Using Articulated ICP." In ICCRT 2019: 2019 2nd International Conference on Control and Robot Technology. New York, NY, USA: ACM, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/3387304.3387309.

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Pellegrini, S., K. Schindler, and D. Nardi. "A Generalisation of the ICP Algorithm for Articulated Bodies." In British Machine Vision Conference 2008. British Machine Vision Association, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.5244/c.22.87.

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Liang, Hui, Junsong Yuan, and Daniel Thalmann. "Hand pose estimation by combining fingertip tracking and articulated ICP." In the 11th ACM SIGGRAPH International Conference. New York, New York, USA: ACM Press, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/2407516.2407543.

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Mundermann, Lars, Stefano Corazza, and Thomas P. Andriacchi. "Accurately measuring human movement using articulated ICP with soft-joint constraints and a repository of articulated models." In 2007 IEEE Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition. IEEE, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/cvpr.2007.383302.

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Ghnem, A., and T. Saleh. "Three DoF articulated robotic manipulator for teaching and learning." In 8th International Conference on Mechatronics Engineering (ICOM 2022). Institution of Engineering and Technology, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1049/icp.2022.2264.

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du Bois d'Aische, A., M. de Craene, B. Macq, and S. K. Warfield. "An articulated registration method." In 2005 International Conference on Image Processing. IEEE, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icip.2005.1529677.

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de Chaumont, F., A. Dufour, and J. C. Olivo-Marin. "Tracking articulated objects with physics engines." In 2009 16th IEEE International Conference on Image Processing ICIP 2009. IEEE, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icip.2009.5414258.

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Kalafatlar, Emre, and Yucel Yemez. "3D Articulated Shape Segmentation Using Motion Information." In 2010 20th International Conference on Pattern Recognition (ICPR). IEEE, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icpr.2010.877.

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Sinclair, D. "The Euclidean hinge constraint in articulated motions." In Proceedings of 13th International Conference on Pattern Recognition. IEEE, 1996. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icpr.1996.546116.

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Reports on the topic "Articulated ICP"

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Ledin, Chase, Olujoke Fakoya, and Jaime Garcia-Iglesias. Stories of HIV activists during COVID-19 in the UK. University of Edinburgh, October 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.2218/ed.9781912669462.

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Stories of HIV Activists during COVID-19 in the UK examines and interprets the experiences of HIV activists during the COVID-19 pandemic. It relies on qualitative data obtained through a UK-ICN BBSRC funded grant. We draw from these stories to start a conversation about how activism translates from one health crisis (HIV/AIDS) to another (COVID-19). These activist stories tell us about how activist individuals and organisations responded to COVID-19, but they also provide insight for future pandemic contexts. The UK and many other countries across the world face a variety of new pandemic threats, including monkeypox and Ebola, which demand new forms of health intervention and strategies to mobilise individuals and communities. We use these stories to illuminate the resilience of some activists in the face of crisis and to articulate ways in which health activism can be adapted and remobilised to respond to new health crises.
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