Gordon Owusu Boateng

CV
h-index35
3papers
78citations
Novelty37%
AI Score33

3 Papers

CVJul 29, 2024
Structural damage detection via hierarchical damage information with volumetric assessment

Isaac Osei Agyemang, Isaac Adjei-Mensah, Daniel Acheampong et al.

Structural health monitoring (SHM) is essential for ensuring the safety and longevity of infrastructure, but complex image environments, noisy labels, and reliance on manual damage assessments often hinder its effectiveness. This study introduces the Guided Detection Network (Guided-DetNet), a framework designed to address these challenges. Guided-DetNet is characterized by a Generative Attention Module (GAM), Hierarchical Elimination Algorithm (HEA), and Volumetric Contour Visual Assessment (VCVA). GAM leverages cross-horizontal and cross-vertical patch merging and cross-foreground-background feature fusion to generate varied features to mitigate complex image environments. HEA addresses noisy labeling using hierarchical relationships among classes to refine instances given an image by eliminating unlikely class instances. VCVA assesses the severity of detected damages via volumetric representation and quantification leveraging the Dirac delta distribution. A comprehensive quantitative study and two robustness tests were conducted using the PEER Hub dataset, and a drone-based application, which involved a field experiment, was conducted to substantiate Guided-DetNet's promising performances. In triple classification tasks, the framework achieved 96% accuracy, surpassing state-of-the-art classifiers by up to 3%. In dual detection tasks, it outperformed competitive detectors with a precision of 94% and a mean average precision (mAP) of 79% while maintaining a frame rate of 57.04fps, suitable for real-time applications. Additionally, robustness tests demonstrated resilience under adverse conditions, with precision scores ranging from 79% to 91%. Guided-DetNet is established as a robust and efficient framework for SHM, offering advancements in automation and precision, with the potential for widespread application in drone-based infrastructure inspections.

CVJan 20
ParkingTwin: Training-Free Streaming 3D Reconstruction for Parking-Lot Digital Twins

Xinhao Liu, Yu Wang, Xiansheng Guo et al.

High-fidelity parking-lot digital twins provide essential priors for path planning, collision checking, and perception validation in Automated Valet Parking (AVP). Yet robot-oriented reconstruction faces a trilemma: sparse forward-facing views cause weak parallax and ill-posed geometry; dynamic occlusions and extreme lighting hinder stable texture fusion; and neural rendering typically needs expensive offline optimization, violating edge-side streaming constraints. We propose ParkingTwin, a training-free, lightweight system for online streaming 3D reconstruction. First, OSM-prior-driven geometric construction uses OpenStreetMap semantic topology to directly generate a metric-consistent TSDF, replacing blind geometric search with deterministic mapping and avoiding costly optimization. Second, geometry-aware dynamic filtering employs a quad-modal constraint field (normal/height/depth consistency) to reject moving vehicles and transient occlusions in real time. Third, illumination-robust fusion in CIELAB decouples luminance and chromaticity via adaptive L-channel weighting and depth-gradient suppression, reducing seams under abrupt lighting changes. ParkingTwin runs at 30+ FPS on an entry-level GTX 1660. On a 68,000 m^2 real-world dataset, it achieves SSIM 0.87 (+16.0%), delivers about 15x end-to-end speedup, and reduces GPU memory by 83.3% compared with state-of-the-art 3D Gaussian Splatting (3DGS) that typically requires high-end GPUs (RTX 4090D). The system outputs explicit triangle meshes compatible with Unity/Unreal digital-twin pipelines. Project page: https://mihoutao-liu.github.io/ParkingTwin/

NIDec 16, 2024
A Survey on Large Language Models for Communication, Network, and Service Management: Application Insights, Challenges, and Future Directions

Gordon Owusu Boateng, Hani Sami, Ahmed Alagha et al.

The rapid evolution of communication networks in recent decades has intensified the need for advanced Network and Service Management (NSM) strategies to address the growing demands for efficiency, scalability, enhanced performance, and reliability of these networks. Large Language Models (LLMs) have received tremendous attention due to their unparalleled capabilities in various Natural Language Processing (NLP) tasks and generating context-aware insights, offering transformative potential for automating diverse communication NSM tasks. Contrasting existing surveys that consider a single network domain, this survey investigates the integration of LLMs across different communication network domains, including mobile networks and related technologies, vehicular networks, cloud-based networks, and fog/edge-based networks. First, the survey provides foundational knowledge of LLMs, explicitly detailing the generic transformer architecture, general-purpose and domain-specific LLMs, LLM model pre-training and fine-tuning, and their relation to communication NSM. Under a novel taxonomy of network monitoring and reporting, AI-powered network planning, network deployment and distribution, and continuous network support, we extensively categorize LLM applications for NSM tasks in each of the different network domains, exploring existing literature and their contributions thus far. Then, we identify existing challenges and open issues, as well as future research directions for LLM-driven communication NSM, emphasizing the need for scalable, adaptable, and resource-efficient solutions that align with the dynamic landscape of communication networks. We envision that this survey serves as a holistic roadmap, providing critical insights for leveraging LLMs to enhance NSM.