The MNIST dataset of the handwritten digits is known as one of the commonly used datasets for machine learning and computer vision research. We aim to study a widely applicable classification problem and apply a simple yet efficient K-nearest neighbor classifier with an enhanced heuristic. We evaluate the performance of the K-nearest neighbor classification algorithm on the MNIST dataset where the L2 Euclidean distance metric is compared to a modified distance metric which utilizes the sliding window technique in order to avoid performance degradation due to slight spatial misalignments. The accuracy metric and confusion matrices are used as the performance indicators to compare the performance of the baseline algorithm versus the enhanced sliding window method and results show significant improvement using this proposed method.
Short-term future of automated driving can be imagined as a hybrid scenario in which both automated and human-driven vehicles co-exist in the same environment. In order to address the needs of such road configuration, many technology solutions such as vehicular communication and predictive control for automated vehicles have been introduced in the literature. Both aforementioned solutions rely on driving data of the human driver. In this work, we investigate the currently available driving datasets and introduce a real-world maneuver-based driving dataset that is collected during our urban driving data collection campaign. We also provide a model that embeds the patterns in maneuver-specific samples. Such model can be employed for classification and prediction purposes.
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