We studied whether the blur/sharpness of an occlusion boundary between a sharply focused surface and a blurred surface is used as a relative depth cue. Observers judged relative depth in pairs of images that differed only in the blurriness of the common boundary between two adjoining texture regions, one blurred and one sharply focused. Two experiments were conducted; in both, observers consistently used the blur of the boundary as a cue to relative depth. However, the strength of the cue, relative to other cues, varied across observers. The occlusion edge blur cue can resolve the near/far ambiguity inherent in depth-from-focus computations.
The vast majority of digital currency transactions rely on a blockchain framework to ensure quick and accurate execution. As such, understanding how a blockchain works is vital to understanding the dynamics of cryptocurrency operations. One of the key benefits of this type of system is the exhaustive records captured in a given marketplace. The interwoven movement between agents can effectively be expressed as a graph via the extraction of historical data from the blockchain. By looking at a specific blockchain as an interaction of its agents, network representation learning can be leveraged to examine these relationships. Furthermore, the analysis of a graph structure can be enhanced through the application of modern and sophisticated machine learning techniques. Leveraging the automated nature of these methods can create meaningful observations of the input network. In this paper, we utilize several machine learning models to detect anomalous transactions in various digital currency markets. We find that supervised learning techniques yield encouraging results, whereas unsupervised learning techniques struggle more with the classification.
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