Paper
23 March 2015 A haptic-inspired audio approach for structural health monitoring decision-making
Zhu Mao, Michael Todd, David Mascareñas
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Haptics is the field at the interface of human touch (tactile sensation) and classification, whereby tactile feedback is used to train and inform a decision-making process. In structural health monitoring (SHM) applications, haptic devices have been introduced and applied in a simplified laboratory scale scenario, in which nonlinearity, representing the presence of damage, was encoded into a vibratory manual interface. In this paper, the “spirit” of haptics is adopted, but here ultrasonic guided wave scattering information is transformed into audio (rather than tactile) range signals. After sufficient training, the structural damage condition, including occurrence and location, can be identified through the encoded audio waveforms. Different algorithms are employed in this paper to generate the transformed audio signals and the performance of each encoding algorithms is compared, and also compared with standard machine learning classifiers. In the long run, the haptic decision-making is aiming to detect and classify structural damages in a more rigorous environment, and approaching a baseline-free fashion with embedded temperature compensation.
© (2015) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Zhu Mao, Michael Todd, and David Mascareñas "A haptic-inspired audio approach for structural health monitoring decision-making", Proc. SPIE 9438, Health Monitoring of Structural and Biological Systems 2015, 943821 (23 March 2015); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2084464
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CITATIONS
Cited by 2 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Computer programming

Structural health monitoring

Haptic technology

Ultrasonics

Waveguides

Neodymium

Sensors

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