Anju Rani

CV
h-index16
8papers
90citations
Novelty20%
AI Score38

8 Papers

2.6CVMay 5
Imagery Dataset for Remaining Useful Life Estimation of Synthetic Fibre Ropes

Anju Rani, Daniel Ortiz-Arroyo, Petar Durdevic

Remaining useful life (RUL) estimation of synthetic fibre ropes (SFRs) is critical for safe operation in offshore-crane, wind turbine installation, and heavy-load handling applications, where rope failure can result in catastrophic safety incidents and costly downtime. Despite growing research interest in data-driven condition monitoring, there is no publicly available image dataset that captures the complete degradation lifecycle of SFRs under controlled cyclic fatigue loading. To address this gap, we present a novel image dataset comprising approximately 34,700 high-resolution images of eleven Dyneema SK75/78 high-modulus polyethylene (HMPE) rope samples subjected to cyclic fatigue on a sheave-bend test stand at seven distinct axial load levels ranging from 60 kN to 280 kN. Ropes were loaded until mechanical failure, with fatigue lifetimes ranging from 695 cycles to 8,340 cycles. After every fixed number of sheave cycles (an inspection burst), ten images were captured at different cross-sectional positions along the rope, providing spatially representative sampling of surface degradation throughout the rope's entire service life. The images obtained from each load are annotated with the corresponding elapsed cycle count, enabling a direct computation of RUL for any rope in the sequence. This dataset aims to support a broad range of machine learning (ML) tasks including RUL regression, damage progression modelling, anomaly detection, and load-conditioned prognostics. The dataset is intended to serve as a benchmark resource for the development and comparison of vision-based condition monitoring (CM) and prognostics algorithms for SFRs.

CVSep 29, 2023
Imagery Dataset for Condition Monitoring of Synthetic Fibre Ropes

Anju Rani, Daniel O. Arroyo, Petar Durdevic

Automatic visual inspection of synthetic fibre ropes (SFRs) is a challenging task in the field of offshore, wind turbine industries, etc. The presence of any defect in SFRs can compromise their structural integrity and pose significant safety risks. Due to the large size and weight of these ropes, it is often impractical to detach and inspect them frequently. Therefore, there is a critical need to develop efficient defect detection methods to assess their remaining useful life (RUL). To address this challenge, a comprehensive dataset has been generated, comprising a total of 6,942 raw images representing both normal and defective SFRs. The dataset encompasses a wide array of defect scenarios which may occur throughout their operational lifespan, including but not limited to placking defects, cut strands, chafings, compressions, core outs and normal. This dataset serves as a resource to support computer vision applications, including object detection, classification, and segmentation, aimed at detecting and analyzing defects in SFRs. The availability of this dataset will facilitate the development and evaluation of robust defect detection algorithms. The aim of generating this dataset is to assist in the development of automated defect detection systems that outperform traditional visual inspection methods, thereby paving the way for safer and more efficient utilization of SFRs across a wide range of applications.

20.7CVMay 6
DART: A Vision-Language Foundation Model for Comprehensive Rope Condition Monitoring

Anju Rani, Daniel Ortiz-Arroyo, Petar Durdevic

The condition monitoring (CM) of synthetic fibre ropes (SFRs) used in offshore, maritime, and industrial settings demands more than a classifier: inspectors need continuous severity estimates, maintenance recommendations, anomaly flags, deterioration timelines, and automated reports, all from a single inspection image. We present DART (Damage Assessment via Rope Transformer), a vision-language foundation model that addresses the full rope inspection workflow through a unified multi-task architecture. DART extends the Joint-Embedding Predictive Architecture (JEPA) to the cross-modal domain by coupling a Vision Transformer (ViT-H/14) with Llama-3.2-3B-Instruct via a Severity-Conditioned Cross-Modal Fusion (SC-CMF) module. Three architectural innovations drive the model's versatility: (1) HD-MASK, a saliency-guided masking strategy that focuses self-supervised reconstruction on damage-dense patches; (2) per-class learnable severity gates that adaptively weight language grounding by damage category; and (3) a Contrastive Damage Disentanglement (CDD) loss that shapes the embedding space to simultaneously encode damage type, severity ordering, and cross-modal semantics. Trained once on 4,270 images spanning 14 fine-grained rope damage classes, the frozen DART backbone supports downstream tasks without any task-specific fine-tuning: damage classification (93.22 % accuracy, 91.04 % macro-F1, +38.5 pp over a vision-only baseline), continuous severity regression (Spearman rho = 0.94, within-1-ordinal accuracy 99.6 %), few-shot recognition (89.2 % macro-F1 at 20 shots). These results demonstrate that DART functions as a general-purpose CM backbone that goes well beyond classification, providing actionable inspection intelligence from a single shared representation.

CVFeb 20, 2024
Advancements in Point Cloud-Based 3D Defect Detection and Classification for Industrial Systems: A Comprehensive Survey

Anju Rani, Daniel Ortiz-Arroyo, Petar Durdevic

In recent years, 3D point clouds (PCs) have gained significant attention due to their diverse applications across various fields, such as computer vision (CV), condition monitoring (CM), virtual reality, robotics, autonomous driving, etc. Deep learning (DL) has proven effective in leveraging 3D PCs to address various challenges encountered in 2D vision. However, applying deep neural networks (DNNs) to process 3D PCs presents unique challenges. This paper provides an in-depth review of recent advancements in DL-based industrial CM using 3D PCs, with a specific focus on defect shape classification and segmentation within industrial applications. Recognizing the crucial role of these aspects in industrial maintenance, the paper offers insightful observations on the strengths and limitations of the reviewed DL-based PC processing methods. This knowledge synthesis aims to contribute to understanding and enhancing CM processes, particularly within the framework of remaining useful life (RUL), in industrial systems.

CVFeb 26, 2025
FungalZSL: Zero-Shot Fungal Classification with Image Captioning Using a Synthetic Data Approach

Anju Rani, Daniel O. Arroyo, Petar Durdevic

The effectiveness of zero-shot classification in large vision-language models (VLMs), such as Contrastive Language-Image Pre-training (CLIP), depends on access to extensive, well-aligned text-image datasets. In this work, we introduce two complementary data sources, one generated by large language models (LLMs) to describe the stages of fungal growth and another comprising a diverse set of synthetic fungi images. These datasets are designed to enhance CLIPs zero-shot classification capabilities for fungi-related tasks. To ensure effective alignment between text and image data, we project them into CLIPs shared representation space, focusing on different fungal growth stages. We generate text using LLaMA3.2 to bridge modality gaps and synthetically create fungi images. Furthermore, we investigate knowledge transfer by comparing text outputs from different LLM techniques to refine classification across growth stages.

CVAug 1, 2025
CLIPTime: Time-Aware Multimodal Representation Learning from Images and Text

Anju Rani, Daniel Ortiz-Arroyo, Petar Durdevic

Understanding the temporal dynamics of biological growth is critical across diverse fields such as microbiology, agriculture, and biodegradation research. Although vision-language models like Contrastive Language Image Pretraining (CLIP) have shown strong capabilities in joint visual-textual reasoning, their effectiveness in capturing temporal progression remains limited. To address this, we propose CLIPTime, a multimodal, multitask framework designed to predict both the developmental stage and the corresponding timestamp of fungal growth from image and text inputs. Built upon the CLIP architecture, our model learns joint visual-textual embeddings and enables time-aware inference without requiring explicit temporal input during testing. To facilitate training and evaluation, we introduce a synthetic fungal growth dataset annotated with aligned timestamps and categorical stage labels. CLIPTime jointly performs classification and regression, predicting discrete growth stages alongside continuous timestamps. We also propose custom evaluation metrics, including temporal accuracy and regression error, to assess the precision of time-aware predictions. Experimental results demonstrate that CLIPTime effectively models biological progression and produces interpretable, temporally grounded outputs, highlighting the potential of vision-language models in real-world biological monitoring applications.

CVSep 4, 2023
Defect Detection in Synthetic Fibre Ropes using Detectron2 Framework

Anju Rani, Daniel O. Arroyo, Petar Durdevic

Fibre ropes with the latest technology have emerged as an appealing alternative to steel ropes for offshore industries due to their lightweight and high tensile strength. At the same time, frequent inspection of these ropes is essential to ensure the proper functioning and safety of the entire system. The development of deep learning (DL) models in condition monitoring (CM) applications offers a simpler and more effective approach for defect detection in synthetic fibre ropes (SFRs). The present paper investigates the performance of Detectron2, a state-of-the-art library for defect detection and instance segmentation. Detectron2 with Mask R-CNN architecture is used for segmenting defects in SFRs. Mask R-CNN with various backbone configurations has been trained and tested on an experimentally obtained dataset comprising 1,803 high-dimensional images containing seven damage classes (placking high, placking medium, placking low, compression, core out, chafing, and normal respectively) for SFRs. By leveraging the capabilities of Detectron2, this study aims to develop an automated and efficient method for detecting defects in SFRs, enhancing the inspection process, and ensuring the safety of the fibre ropes.

QUANT-PHDec 22, 2021
BBM92 quantum key distribution over a free space dusty channel of 200 meters

Sarika Mishra, Ayan Biswas, Satyajeet Patil et al.

Free space quantum communication assumes importance as it is a precursor for satellite-based quantum communication needed for secure key distribution over longer distances. Prepare and measure protocols like BB84 consider the satellite as a trusted device, which is fraught with security threat looking at the current trend for satellite-based optical communication. Therefore, entanglement-based protocols must be preferred, so that one can consider the satellite as an untrusted device too. The current work reports the implementation of BBM92 protocol, an entanglement-based QKD protocol over 200 m distance using an indigenous facility developed at Physical Research Laboratory (PRL), Ahmedabad, India. Our results show the effect of atmospheric aerosols on sift key rate, and eventually, secure key rate. Such experiments are important to validate the models to account for the atmospheric effects on the key rates achieved through satellite-based QKD.