Paper
3 October 1996 Water-quality inspection by analyzing motionality of fish
Sae-Jin Park, Kyung-Soo Kim, Hyung-Il Choi, Hyung-Ki Lee, Young-Ho Lee
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Abstract
To secure clean water, we need to monitor water quality and detect out harmful materials, if any contained in the water, as early as possible. In general, fish are believed to be more sensitive to water quality than humans are. When fish are moving slowly in a cluster, the water quality is believed to be good enough. However, fish keep afloat on the water or they behave wildly when poisonous materials are added into the water. This paper describes the system which visually inspects water quality by analyzing the motionality of fish. The motionality features are defined by characterizing changes of behavioral patterns of fish. These features are then used in making a fuzzy decision about water quality. The methodology described in this paper is expected to be reliable, and to enable quick and accurate detection or assessment of hazardous chemicals contained in the water.
© (1996) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Sae-Jin Park, Kyung-Soo Kim, Hyung-Il Choi, Hyung-Ki Lee, and Young-Ho Lee "Water-quality inspection by analyzing motionality of fish", Proc. SPIE 2899, Automated Optical Inspection for Industry, (3 October 1996); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.253003
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KEYWORDS
Fuzzy logic

Inspection

Optical inspection

Binary data

Chemical analysis

Feature extraction

Visual analytics

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