2022
DOI: 10.1016/j.actaastro.2022.08.017
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Automated identification of astronauts on board the International Space Station: A case study in space archaeology

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Cited by 5 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…Over the last two decades, space archaeologists have drawn attention to the need to consider the preservation of space heritage in various Earth‐orbital positions (Clemens, 2009; Gorman, 2005b, 2009d), interplanetary space (Darrin, 2015; Sample, 2009), the ISS (Ali et al, 2022; Walsh & Gorman, 2021), and on Earth (Westwood et al, 2017). Planetary geoarchaeology is dedicated to studying space heritage on extraterrestrial surfaces and extends the applications of space archaeology by increasing our understanding of the past and future under two key principles.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Over the last two decades, space archaeologists have drawn attention to the need to consider the preservation of space heritage in various Earth‐orbital positions (Clemens, 2009; Gorman, 2005b, 2009d), interplanetary space (Darrin, 2015; Sample, 2009), the ISS (Ali et al, 2022; Walsh & Gorman, 2021), and on Earth (Westwood et al, 2017). Planetary geoarchaeology is dedicated to studying space heritage on extraterrestrial surfaces and extends the applications of space archaeology by increasing our understanding of the past and future under two key principles.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We identified three major phases of activity, corresponding to contexts 0-5, 6-52, and 53-59 (figs. 15,16,17). The primary characteristics of these phases relate to an early period of unclear associations (0-5) marked by the presence of rolls of adhesive tape and a few body maintenance items (toothpaste and toothbrush, wet wipes); the appearance of a toiletry kit on the right side of the sample area, fully open with clear views of many of the items contained within (6-52); and finally, the closure of the toiletry kit so that its contents can no longer be seen (53-59).…”
Section: Square 05mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Since it is too costly and difficult to visit our archaeological site in person, we have to creatively re-imagine traditional archaeological methods to answer key questions. To date, our team has studied crew-created visual displays [12,13], meanings and processes associated with items returned to Earth [14], distribution of different population groups around the various modules [15], and the development of machine learning (ML) computational techniques to extract data about people and places, all from historic photographs of life on the ISS [16].From January to March 2022, we developed a new dataset through the first archaeological work conducted off-Earth. We documented material culture in six locations around the habitat, using daily photography taken by the crew which we then annotated and studied as evidence for changes in archaeological assemblages of material culture over time.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Amazon Rekognition has several other features for object detection and image classification. Studies on Amazon Rekognition include image tagging (Kuang et al, 2021), face identification (Ali et al, 2022) (Liu & Wilkinson, 2020), emotion detection (Yang et al, 2021), and image captioning (Leotta et al, 2022).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%