Institution
Mitre Corporation
Company•Bedford, Massachusetts, United States•
About: Mitre Corporation is a company organization based out in Bedford, Massachusetts, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Air traffic control & National Airspace System. The organization has 4884 authors who have published 6053 publications receiving 124808 citations. The organization is also known as: Mitre & MITRE.
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
More filters
••
16 Jun 1990TL;DR: By creating a burst image from the original document image, the processing time of the Hough transform can be reduced by a factor of as much as 7.4 for documents with gray-scale images and interline spacing can be determined more accurately.
Abstract: As part of the development of a document image analysis system, a method, based on the Hough transform, was devised for the detection of document skew and interline spacing-necessary parameters for the automatic segmentation of text from graphics. Because the Hough transform is computationally expensive, the amount of data within a document image is reduced through the computation of its horizontal and vertical black runlengths. Histograms of these runlengths are used to determine whether the document is in portrait or landscape orientation. A gray scale burst image is created from the black runlengths that are perpendicular to the text lines by placing the length of the run in the run's bottom-most pixel. By creating a burst image from the original document image, the processing time of the Hough transform can be reduced by a factor of as much as 7.4 for documents with gray-scale images. Because only small runlengths are input to the Hough transform and because the accumulator array is incremented by the runlength associated with a pixel rather than by a factor of 1, the negative effects of noise, black margins, and figures are avoided. Consequently, interline spacing can be determined more accurately. >
263 citations
••
05 Dec 2006TL;DR: This work analytically establishes the optimality of LLREF, and establishes that the algorithm has bounded overhead, and this bound is independent of time quanta (unlike Pfair).
Abstract: We present an optimal real-time scheduling algorithm for multiprocessors -- one that satisfies all task deadlines, when the total utilization demand does not exceed the utilization capacity of the processors. The algorithm called LLREF, is designed based on a novel abstraction for reasoning about task execution behavior on multiprocessors: the Time and Local Execution Time Domain Plane (or TL plane). LLREF is based on the fluid scheduling model and the fairness notion, and uses the T-L plane to describe fluid schedules without using time quanta, unlike the optimal Pfair algorithm (which uses time quanta). We show that scheduling for multiprocessors can be viewed as repeatedly occurring T-L planes, and feasibly scheduling on a single T-L plane results in the optimal schedule. We analytically establish the optimality of LLREF. Further, we establish that the algorithm has bounded overhead, and this bound is independent of time quanta (unlike Pfair). Our simulation results validate our analysis on the algorithm overhead.
262 citations
••
07 May 1990TL;DR: An analysis of some recent combinatorial theories of computer security is presented from the perspective of information theory, intended to be applicable to nondeterministic systems that may be networked.
Abstract: An analysis of some recent combinatorial theories of computer security is presented from the perspective of information theory. The theories analyzed are information-flow theories based on the concept of nondeducibility. They are intended to be applicable to nondeterministic systems that may be networked. >
262 citations
••
14 Jun 2005TL;DR: A collection of articles, by individuals who were involved in this industry in various ways, describes some of these experiences and points to the challenges ahead.
Abstract: The goal of EII systems is to provide uniform access to multiple data sources without having to first load them into a data warehouse. Since the late 1990's, several EII products have appeared in the marketplace and significant experience has been accumulated from fielding such systems. This collection of articles, by individuals who were involved in this industry in various ways, describes some of these experiences and points to the challenges ahead.
260 citations
••
01 Dec 1997TL;DR: The motivations and processes used to develop the High Level Architecture are described and a technical description of key elements of the architecture and supporting software are provided.
Abstract: The High Level Architecture (HLA) provides the specification of a common technical architecture for use across all classes of simulations in the US Department of Defense. It provides the structural basis for simulation interoperability. The baseline definition of the HLA includes (1) the HLA Rules, (2) the HLA Interface Specification, and (3) the HLA Object Model Template. This paper describes the motivations and processes used to develop the High Level Architecture and provides a technical description of key elements of the architecture and supporting software. Services defined in the interface specification for providing time management (TM) and data distribution management (DDM) for distributed simulations are described.
260 citations
Authors
Showing all 4896 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Sushil Jajodia | 101 | 664 | 35556 |
Myles R. Allen | 82 | 295 | 32668 |
Barbara Liskov | 76 | 204 | 25026 |
Alfred D. Steinberg | 74 | 295 | 20974 |
Peter T. Cummings | 69 | 521 | 18942 |
Vincent H. Crespi | 63 | 287 | 20347 |
Michael J. Pazzani | 62 | 183 | 28036 |
David Goldhaber-Gordon | 58 | 192 | 15709 |
Yeshaiahu Fainman | 57 | 648 | 14661 |
Jonathan Anderson | 57 | 195 | 10349 |
Limsoon Wong | 55 | 367 | 13524 |
Chris Clifton | 54 | 160 | 11501 |
Paul Ward | 52 | 408 | 12400 |
Richard M. Fujimoto | 52 | 290 | 13584 |
Bhavani Thuraisingham | 52 | 563 | 10562 |