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E-grāmata: Automated Taxon Identification in Systematics: Theory, Approaches and Applications [Taylor & Francis e-book]

Edited by (Cathay Pacific Airways, Hong Kong, China)
  • Formāts: 368 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 17-Oct-2019
  • Izdevniecība: CRC Press
  • ISBN-13: 9780429122903
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
  • Taylor & Francis e-book
  • Cena: 257,91 €*
  • * this price gives unlimited concurrent access for unlimited time
  • Standarta cena: 368,44 €
  • Ietaupiet 30%
  • Formāts: 368 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 17-Oct-2019
  • Izdevniecība: CRC Press
  • ISBN-13: 9780429122903
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
The automated identification of biological objects or groups has been a dream among taxonomists and systematists for centuries. However, progress in designing and implementing practical systems for fully automated taxon identification has been frustratingly slow. Regardless, the dream has never died. Recent developments in computer architectures and innovations in software design have placed the tools needed to realize this vision in the hands of the systematics community, not several years hence, but now. And not just for DNA barcodes or other molecular data, but for digital images of organisms, digital sounds, digitized chemical data - essentially any type of digital data.

Based on evidence accumulated over the last decade and written by applied researchers, Automated Taxon Identification in Systematics explores contemporary applications of quantitative approaches to the problem of taxon recognition. The book begins by reviewing the current state of systematics and placing automated taxon identification in the context of contemporary trends, needs, and opportunities. The chapters present and evaluate different aspects of current automated system designs. They then provide descriptions of case studies in which different theoretical and practical aspects of the overall group-identification problem are identified, analyzed, and discussed.

A recurring theme through the chapters is the relationship between taxonomic identification, automated group identification, and morphometrics. This collection provides a bridge between these communities and between them and the wider world of applied taxonomy. The only book-length treatment that explores automated group identification in systematic context, this text also includes introductions to basic aspects of the fields of contemporary artificial intelligence and mathematical group recognition for the entire biological community.
Chapter 1 Introduction
1(8)
Norman MacLeod
Chapter 2 Digital Innovation and Taxonomy's Finest Hour
9(16)
Quentin D. Wheeler
Chapter 3 Natural Object Categorization: Man versus Machine
25(22)
Philip F. Culverhouse
Chapter 4 Neural Networks in Brief
47(22)
Robert Lang
Chapter 5 Morphometries and Computed Homology: An Old Theme Revisited
69(14)
Fred L. Bookstein
Chapter 6 The Automated Identification of Taxa: Concepts and Applications
83(18)
David Chesmore
Chapter 7 DAISY: A Practical Computer-Based Tool for Semi-Automated Species Identification
101(14)
Mark A. O'Neill
Chapter 8 Automated Extraction and Analysis of Morphological Features for Species Identification
115(16)
Volker Steinhage
Stefan Schroder
Karl-Heinz Lampe
Armin B. Cremers
Chapter 9 Introducing SPIDA-Web: Wavelets, Neural Networks and Internet Accessibility in an Image-Based Automated Identification System
131(22)
Kimberly N. Russell
Martin T. Do
Jeremy C. Huff
Norman I. Platnick
Chapter 10 Automated Tools for the Identification of Taxa from Morphological Data: Face Recognition in Wasps
153(36)
Norman MacLeod
Mark A. O'Neill
Stig A. Walsh
Chapter 11 Pattern Recognition for Ecological Science and Environmental Monitoring: An Initial Report
189(18)
Eric N. Mortensen
Enrique L. Delgado
Hongli Deng
David Lytle
Andrew Moldenke
Robert Paasch
Linda Shapiro
Pengcheng Wu
Wei Zhang
Thomas G. Dietterich
Chapter 12 Plant Identification from Characters and Measurements Using Artificial Neural Networks
207(18)
Jonathan Y. Clark
Chapter 13 Spot the Penguin: Can Reliable Taxonomic Identifications Be Made Using Isolated Foot Bones?
225(14)
Stig A. Walsh
Norman MacLeod
Mark A. O'Neill
Chapter 14 A New Semi-Automatic Morphometric Protocol for Conodonts and a Preliminary Taxonomic Application
239(22)
David Jones
Mark Purnell
Chapter 15 Decision Trees: A Machine-Learning Method for Characterizing Morphological Patterns Resulting from Ecological Adaptation
261(16)
Manuel Mendoza
Chapter 16 Data Integration and Multifactorial Analyses: The Yeasts and the BioloMICS Software as a Case Study
277(12)
Robert Vincent
Chapter 17 Automatic Measurement of Honeybee Wings
289(10)
Adam Tofilski
Chapter 18 Good Performers Know Their Audience! Identification and Characterization of Pitch Contours in Infant- and Foreigner-Directed Speech
299(12)
Monja A. Knoll
Stig A. Walsh
Norman MacLeod
Mark A. O'Neill
Maria Uther
Appendix 311(18)
Subject Index 329(8)
Taxon Index 337
Norman MacLeod