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Creators/Authors contains: "Nahrstedt, Klara"

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  1. Free, publicly-accessible full text available December 1, 2025
  2. Free, publicly-accessible full text available October 28, 2025
  3. Lu, Xin; Wang, Wei; Wu, Dehao; Li, Xiaoxia (Ed.)
    In the rapidly evolving landscape of scientific semiconductor laboratories (commonly known as, cleanrooms), integrated with Internet of Things (IoT) technology and Cyber-Physical Systems (CPSs), several factors including operational changes, sensor aging, software updates and the introduction of new processes or equipment can lead to dynamic and non-stationary data distributions in evolving data streams. This phenomenon, known as concept drift, poses a substantial challenge for traditional data-driven digital twin static machine learning (ML) models for anomaly detection and classification. Subsequently, the drift in normal and anomalous data distributions over time causes the model performance to decay, resulting in high false alarm rates and missed anomalies. To address this issue, we present TWIN-ADAPT, a continuous learning model within a digital twin framework designed to dynamically update and optimize its anomaly classification algorithm in response to changing data conditions. This model is evaluated against state-of-the-art concept drift adaptation models and tested under simulated drift scenarios using diverse noise distributions to mimic real-world distribution shift in anomalies. TWIN-ADAPT is applied to three critical CPS datasets of Smart Manufacturing Labs (also known as “Cleanrooms”): Fumehood, Lithography Unit and Vacuum Pump. The evaluation results demonstrate that TWIN-ADAPT’s continual learning model for optimized and adaptive anomaly classification achieves a high accuracy and F1 score of 96.97% and 0.97, respectively, on the Fumehood CPS dataset, showing an average performance improvement of 0.57% over the offline model. For the Lithography and Vacuum Pump datasets, TWIN-ADAPT achieves an average accuracy of 69.26% and 71.92%, respectively, with performance improvements of 75.60% and 10.42% over the offline model. These significant improvements highlight the efficacy of TWIN-ADAPT’s adaptive capabilities. Additionally, TWIN-ADAPT shows a very competitive performance when compared with other benchmark drift adaptation algorithms. This performance demonstrates TWIN-ADAPT’s robustness across different modalities and datasets, confirming its suitability for any IoT-driven CPS framework managing diverse data distributions in real time streams. Its adaptability and effectiveness make it a versatile tool for dynamic industrial settings. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available July 1, 2025
  4. Recent advances in computer vision algorithms and video streaming technologies have facilitated the development of edge-server-based video analytics systems, enabling them to process sophisticated real-world tasks, such as traffic surveillance and workspace monitoring. Meanwhile, due to their omnidirectional recording capability, 360-degree cameras have been proposed to replace traditional cameras in video analytics systems to offer enhanced situational awareness. Yet, we found that providing an efficient 360-degree video analytics framework is a non-trivial task. Due to the higher resolution and geometric distortion in 360-degree videos, existing video analytics pipelines fail to meet the performance requirements for end-to-end latency and query accuracy. To address these challenges, we introduce the innovative ST-360 framework specifically designed for 360-degree video analytics. This framework features a spatial-temporal filtering algorithm that optimizes both data transmission and computational workloads. Evaluation of the ST-360 framework on a unique dataset of 360-degree first-responders videos reveals that it yields accurate query results with a 50% reduction in end-to-end latency compared to state-of-the-art methods. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available September 4, 2025
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  9. Convolutional Neural Networks (CNN) have given rise to numerous visual analytics applications at the edge of the Internet. The image is typically captured by cameras and then live-streamed to edge servers for analytics due to the prohibitive cost of running CNN on computation-constrained end devices. A critical component to ensure low-latency and accurate visual analytics offloading over low bandwidth networks is image compression which minimizes the amount of visual data to offload and maximizes the decoding quality of salient pixels for analytics. Despite the wide adoption, JPEG standards and traditional image compression techniques do not address the accuracy of analytics tasks, leading to ineffective compression for visual analytics offloading. Although recent machine-centric image compression techniques leverage sophisticated neural network models or hardware architecture to support the accuracy-bandwidth trade-off, they introduce excessive latency in the visual analytics offloading pipeline. This paper presents CICO, a Context-aware Image Compression Optimization framework to achieve low-bandwidth and low-latency visual analytics offloading. CICO contextualizes image compression for offloading by employing easily-computable low-level image features to understand the importance of different image regions for a visual analytics task. Accordingly, CICO can optimize the trade-off between compression size and analytics accuracy. Extensive real-world experiments demonstrate that CICO reduces the bandwidth consumption of existing compression methods by up to 40% under comparable analytics accuracy. Regarding the low-latency support, CICO achieves up to a 2x speedup over state-of-the-art compression techniques. 
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