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The Laboratory of System Engineering

Laboratory in brief

The Laboratory of System Engineering (LSE) was established in 1991 on the base of the UIIP engineering department that had been carrying out research and projects in the field of creation of hardware/software systems for gray-scale image processing. The main scientific directions of the LSE are the development of:

  • system creation theory for real-time processing of video information;
  • extreme situation control systems;
  • telemetric systems for oil and gas transporting enterprises.

In the framework of the main scientific directions the LSE develops:

  • creation of the principles of image decoding systems with dynamically modifying architecture depending on the image quality;
  • technology of automatic estimation of the image quality;
  • methods of automatic tuning of the algorithm parameters for selection of decoding features depending on the image quality;
  • non-linear real-time algorithms of increasing the image quality;
  • methods of obtaining the digital patterns of observed objects invariant to geometrical and brightness distortion;
  • methods of image decoding for automatic change detection in the structure of observed objects;
  • information software packages for image analysis, decoding and restoration;
  • modeling of extreme situations and their consequences (floods, fires, accidents related with atmospheric emission of toxic agents);
  • telemetric system building principles for technological parameters measurement of oil and gas industrial objects;
  • technology of automatic hidden defect detection by using of non-destructive control;
  • classification of object classes on their boundary representation;
  • building principles of automated systems for object and region recognition;
  • expert systems for automatic pattern recognition;
  • creation methods of distributed informative-expert systems in medicine (nephrology).

The main areas of the LSE research activity are the use of remote sensing data for aerospace monitoring, defence, health care, accident control, oil and gas pipeline control, control of technological processes at the chemical and machine-building enterprises, etc.



 
 
©2006, United Institute of Informatics Problems NASB
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