SETI public: The Cyborg Astrobiologist

From: LARRY KLAES (ljk4_at_msn.com)
Date: Tue May 24 2005 - 22:28:55 PDT

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    Paper (*cross-listing*): cs.CV/0505058
    Date: Mon, 23 May 2005 09:55:37 GMT (886kb)

    Title: The Cyborg Astrobiologist: Scouting Red Beds for Uncommon Features with
      Geological Significance

    Authors: Patrick C. McGuire, Enrique Diaz-Martinez, Jens Ormo, Javier
      Gomez-Elvira, Jose A. Rodriguez-Manfredi, Eduardo Sebastian-Martinez, Helge
      Ritter, Robert Haschke, Markus Oesker, Joerg Ontrup
    Comments: to appear in Int'l J. Astrobiology, vol.4, iss.2 (June 2005); 19
      pages, 7 figs
    Subj-class: Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition; Artificial Intelligence; Computational Engineering, Finance, and Science; Human-Computer Interaction; Robotics; Software Engineering; Instrumentation and Detectors
    ACM-class: I.2.10; I.4.6; I.4.8; I.4.9; I.2.9; I.5.4; I.5.5; J.2; J.3; D.2;
      D.1.7; D.4.7
    \\
      The `Cyborg Astrobiologist' (CA) has undergone a second geological field
    trial, at a red sandstone site in northern Guadalajara, Spain, near Riba de
    Santiuste. The Cyborg Astrobiologist is a wearable computer and video camera
    system that has demonstrated a capability to find uncommon interest points in
    geological imagery in real-time in the field. The first (of three) geological
    structures that we studied was an outcrop of nearly homogeneous sandstone,
    which exhibits oxidized-iron impurities in red and and an absence of these iron
    impurities in white. The white areas in these ``red beds'' have turned white
    because the iron has been removed by chemical reduction, perhaps by a
    biological agent. The computer vision system found in one instance several
    (iron-free) white spots to be uncommon and therefore interesting, as well as
    several small and dark nodules. The second geological structure contained
    white, textured mineral deposits on the surface of the sandstone, which were
    found by the CA to be interesting. The third geological structure was a 50 cm
    thick paleosol layer, with fossilized root structures of some plants, which
    were found by the CA to be interesting. A quasi-blind comparison of the Cyborg
    Astrobiologist's interest points for these images with the interest points
    determined afterwards by a human geologist shows that the Cyborg Astrobiologist
    concurred with the human geologist 68% of the time (true positive rate), with a
    32% false positive rate and a 32% false negative rate.
     (abstract has been abridged).

    \\ ( http://arXiv.org/abs/cs/0505058> , 886kb)

     


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