Difference between revisions of "Projects"

From LRDE

(Fix vcsn urls)
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The [[Climb]] team of the laboratory has chosen to focus on the persistent question of ''performance and genericity'', only from a different point of view. The purpose of this research is to examine the solutions offered by languages other than C++, dynamic languages notably, and Lisp in particular. The Climb project aims at investigating the same domain as Olena, but starting from an opposite view.
 
The [[Climb]] team of the laboratory has chosen to focus on the persistent question of ''performance and genericity'', only from a different point of view. The purpose of this research is to examine the solutions offered by languages other than C++, dynamic languages notably, and Lisp in particular. The Climb project aims at investigating the same domain as Olena, but starting from an opposite view.
   
= Funded projects =
+
= Publicly Funded Projects =
   
 
Aware of its youth and its small size, the laboratory has grown slowly among different calls for proposals and participates today in projects of all types: French Interministerial Fund FUI with the help of the Competitiveness Clusters Systematic and cap-digital, ANR, projects funded by bpifrance, by the national Cancer Institute, and European projects. ([[Partnerships | More...]])
 
Aware of its youth and its small size, the laboratory has grown slowly among different calls for proposals and participates today in projects of all types: French Interministerial Fund FUI with the help of the Competitiveness Clusters Systematic and cap-digital, ANR, projects funded by bpifrance, by the national Cancer Institute, and European projects. ([[Partnerships | More...]])
   
  +
== [[MOBIDEM]] ==
= Other Projects =
 
   
== Tiger Compiler: a Tiger compiler written in C++ 2011 ==
 
[[File:tiger.png|64px|left]]
 
   
  +
MOBile IDEntity for the Masses - a platform for mobile signatures (FUI 21 project - 2016-2019 - labeled by the Competitiveness Cluster [http://www.systematic-paris-region.org/ Systematic]).
The [[Tiger|Tiger Compiler]] project is a C++ implementation of a Tiger compiler. The Tiger language is described by Andrew Appel in his "Modern Compiler Implementation" books, and constitutes an important project in the EPITA curriculum.
 
   
It includes subprojects:
 
   
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== [[LINX]] ==
=== [[Havm|HAVM]]: An interpreter for Andrew Appel's Tiger "Tree" Intermediate Language ===
 
   
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An automatic reader to help visually impaired people in their everyday lives (FUI 14 project - 2012-2015 project labeled by [http://www.capdigital.com/ cap-digital]).
   
   
=== [[Nolimips|Nolimips]]: A MIPS-based simulator with "infinitely many registers" ===
 
   
 
=== [[MonoBURG|MonoBURG]]: A code-generator generator based on a tree-rewriting system ===
 
   
 
= [[Old Projects|Old Projects]] =
 
= [[Old Projects|Old Projects]] =

Revision as of 13:57, 10 May 2016

Main Internal Projects

You will find a more thorough presentation of the different projects by clicking each project name.


Olena: a generic image processing library

Olena.jpg

Olena is a platform dedicated to image processing and pattern recognition. Its core component is a generic and efficient C++ library called Milena. Milena provides a framework to implement simple, fast, safe, reusable and extensible image processing tool chains. The library provides many ready-to-use image data structures (regular 1D, 2D, 3D images, graph-based images, etc.) and algorithms. Milena's algorithms are built upon classical entities from the image processing field (images, points/sites, domains, neighborhoods, etc.). This design allows image processing developers and practitioners to easily understand, modify, develop and extend new algorithms while retaining the core traits of Milena: genericity and efficiency.

  • Software design
    • Generic programming
    • Design patterns
  • Image processing

Vcsn: a finite state machine manipulation platform

Vcsn-logo.png

Vcsn is a finite state machine manipulation platform, consisting of a library and tools implemented on top of it. It benefits from the expertise we gained from our intensive work on high performance generic programming for Olena. On the other hand, its theoretical well-foundedness in the area of automata is ensured thanks to a collaboration with Jacques Sakarovitch, at Télécom ParisTech, and with Sylvain Lombardy at the Laboratoire Bordelais de Recherche en Informatique. About ten years after its first inception, the project is taking a new start with the Vaucanson 2 effort. This complete redesign aims at keeping the successful parts of its predecessor (especially genericity and large feature set) while addressing its shortcomings (compile-time and runtime efficiency, the flexibility).

  • Software design
    • Generic programming
    • Design patterns
  • Automata theory

Spot: a model checking library

Spot.png

Spot is an object-oriented model checking library written in C++. It offers a set of bricks to experiment with and develop your own model checker based on transition-based generalized Büchi automata. Spot was born in the MoVe team at LIP6 and is now co-maintained by the LRDE.

  • Automata theory
  • Model Checking

Speaker ID: Speaker's Voice Print

The Speaker Recognition team is working on Machine Learning solutions applied to Speaker Recognition tasks. We propose statistical representations of speech signal which are more robust to the problem of session and channel variabilities.

Keywords:

  • Speaker Recognition
  • Total Variability Space (TV, I-Vectors)
  • Joint Factor Analysis (JFA)
  • Cosine Distance Scoring (CDS)
  • SVM and Kernel Tricks (GSV, NAP, ...)

Climb: a generic image processing library written in Lisp

The Climb team of the laboratory has chosen to focus on the persistent question of performance and genericity, only from a different point of view. The purpose of this research is to examine the solutions offered by languages other than C++, dynamic languages notably, and Lisp in particular. The Climb project aims at investigating the same domain as Olena, but starting from an opposite view.

Publicly Funded Projects

Aware of its youth and its small size, the laboratory has grown slowly among different calls for proposals and participates today in projects of all types: French Interministerial Fund FUI with the help of the Competitiveness Clusters Systematic and cap-digital, ANR, projects funded by bpifrance, by the national Cancer Institute, and European projects. ( More...)

MOBIDEM

MOBile IDEntity for the Masses - a platform for mobile signatures (FUI 21 project - 2016-2019 - labeled by the Competitiveness Cluster Systematic).


LINX

An automatic reader to help visually impaired people in their everyday lives (FUI 14 project - 2012-2015 project labeled by cap-digital).



Old Projects

Conference committees