With the development of unmanned tracked vehicles, soil model predictions of soft terrains are becoming more essential. In order to accurately simulate the interaction characteristics between soil particles and the track, soil modeling with a discrete element method (DEM) is proposed. Volume-based scaled-up modeling of DEM soil particles and the calibration of DEM input parameters were investigated as a feasible approach to realizing many particle calculations. Calibration of DEM input parameters can solve the distortions between actual and DEM particle sizes. Cohesion and friction parameters of the scaled-up soil particle model were recalibrated by the shape accumulated through the virtual design of the experiment. Soil DEM particles were scaled up to 1 mm spherical particles, and recalibrated DEM parameter values were used to match the actual accumulated soil shape. Three calibrated scaled-up soil models were used for the shear stress–displacement DEM simulation of a track segment, and the mean absolute percentage error (MAPE) was less than 11% compared with the actual shear stress–displacement test. The parameter value of soil traction performance empirical model of a tracked vehicle is modified according to the soil shear stress–displacement DEM simulation. Comparative analysis was performed for travel test results of a tracked vehicle; the relative error of the soil traction prediction results to actuals was less than 16.8%. This showed that the volume-based particle scaling technique is an effective DEM for the mechanical simulation of soil.
Underwater vision research is the foundation of marine-related disciplines. The target contour extraction is significant for target tracking and visual information mining. Aiming to resolve the problem that conventional active contour models cannot effectively extract the contours of salient targets in underwater images, we propose a dual-fusion active contour model with semantic information. First, the saliency images are introduced as semantic information and salient target contours are extracted by fusing Chan–Vese and local binary fitting models. Then, the original underwater images are used to supplement the missing contour information by using the local image fitting. Compared with state-of-the-art contour extraction methods, our dual-fusion active contour model can effectively filter out background information and accurately extract salient target contours. Moreover, the proposed model achieves the best results in the quantitative comparison of MAE (mean absolute error), ER (error rate), and DR (detection rate) indicators and provides reliable prior knowledge for target tracking and visual information mining.
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