Results 161 to 170 of about 711,042 (336)

Cross-View Referring Multi-Object Tracking

open access: yesProceedings of the AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence
Referring Multi-Object Tracking (RMOT) is an important topic in the current tracking field. Its task form is to guide the tracker to track objects that match the language description. Current research mainly focuses on referring multi-object tracking under single-view, which refers to a view sequence or multiple unrelated view sequences.
Chen, Sijia, Yu, En, Tao, Wenbing
openaire   +2 more sources

Expanding Chemical Space of Nucleic Acid Nanoparticles for Tunable Antiviral‐Like Immunomodulatory Responses and Potent Adjuvant Activity

open access: yesAdvanced Functional Materials, EarlyView.
We introduce a nucleic acid nanoparticle (NANP) platform designed to be rrecognized by the human innate immune system in a regulated manner. By changing chemical composition while maintaining constant architectural parameters, we identify key determinants of immunorecognition enabling the rational design of NANPs with tunable immune activation profiles
Martin Panigaj   +21 more
wiley   +1 more source

UTrack: Multi-object Tracking with Uncertain Detections

open access: yes
The tracking-by-detection paradigm is the mainstream in multi-object tracking, associating tracks to the predictions of an object detector. Although exhibiting uncertainty through a confidence score, these predictions do not capture the entire variability of the inference process.
Edgardo Solano-Carrillo   +6 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Multi‐Faceted Binder Enhancement via Slurry‐Applicable Thiol‐Ene Click Chemistry for Low‐Pressure‐Operable All‐Solid‐State Batteries

open access: yesAdvanced Functional Materials, EarlyView.
Cross‐linked binders with enhanced resiliencies under low operating pressures are designed via in situ thiol‐ene click reactions within slurries. Cross‐linking improves the Young's moduli and elasticities of the styrene‐butadiene rubber binders, effectively mitigating interparticle delamination within the composite cathodes induced by volumetric ...
Young Joon Park   +9 more
wiley   +1 more source

UniTracker:Transformer Based CrossUnihead for Multi-object Tracking

open access: yesJournal of Real-Time Image Processing
Abstract In recent years, tracking-by-detection (TBD) has emerged as the predominant approach for Multi-object Tracking (MOT). Most TBD algorithms typically employ separate branch heads to handle the coarse feature representations extracted from the backbone network.
Fan Wu, Yifeng Zhang
openaire   +1 more source

Strain‐Activated Photo‐Dehalogenation Unlocks Low‐Energy One and Two‐Photon 3D Microfabrication

open access: yesAdvanced Functional Materials, EarlyView.
5,14‐NMI‐Cz acts, conversely to its 7,10‐NMI‐Cz(7,10‐'dibromo‐2‐(2,6‐diisopropylphenyl)‐1H‐benzo[lmn]carbazolo[9,1‐bc][2,8]phenanthroline‐1,3(2H)‐dione) counterpart, as modular photoinitiator with panchromatic photoactivity, featuring a weak C–Br bond from geometric strain for efficient Type I & II initiation. These studies demonstrate applicability of
Kacper Piskorz   +10 more
wiley   +1 more source

A Multi-Object Tracking Approach Combining Contextual Features and Trajectory Prediction [PDF]

open access: gold, 2023
Peng Zhang   +6 more
openalex   +1 more source

DeconfuseTrack: Dealing with Confusion for Multi-Object Tracking

open access: yes2024 IEEE/CVF Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition (CVPR)
Comment: Accepted to ...
Huang, Cheng   +4 more
openaire   +2 more sources

High‐Spatiotemporal‐Resolution Transparent Thermoelectric Temperature Sensor Arrays Reveal Temperature‐Dependent Windows for Reversible Photothermal Neuromodulation

open access: yesAdvanced Functional Materials, EarlyView.
Thermoelectric temperature sensors are developed that directly measure heat changes during optical‐based neural stimulation with millisecond precision. The sensors reveal the temperature windows for safe reversible neural modulation: 1.4–4.5 °C enables reversible neural inhibition, while temperatures above 6.1 °C cause permanent thermal damage.
Junhee Lee   +9 more
wiley   +1 more source

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