Topological Triviality and Versality for Subgroups $A$ and $K$

Topological Triviality and Versality for Subgroups $A$ and $K$
Author: James Damon
Publisher: American Mathematical Soc.
Total Pages: 121
Release: 1988
Genre: Mathematics
ISBN: 082182452X

In this paper we shall prove two theorems which together allow the infinitesimal methods of Thom and Mather in singularity theory to be applied to problems of topological equivalence of mappings.

Real and Complex Singularities

Real and Complex Singularities
Author: Victor Goryunov
Publisher: American Mathematical Soc.
Total Pages: 218
Release: 2012
Genre: Mathematics
ISBN: 0821853597

"This volume is a collection of papers presented at the 11th International Workshop on Real and Complex Singularities, held July 26-30, 2010, in Sao Carlos, Brazil, in honor of David Mond's 60th birthday. This volume reflects the high level of the conference discussing the most recent results and applications of singularity theory. Articles in the first part cover pure singularity theory: invariants, classification theory, and Milnor fibres. Articles in the second part cover singularities in topology and differential geometry, as well as algebraic geometry and bifurcation theory: Artin-Greenberg function of a plane curve singularity, metric theory of singularities, symplectic singularities, cobordisms of fold maps, Goursat distributions, sections of analytic varieties, Vassiliev invariants, projections of hypersurfaces, and linearity of the Jacobian ideal."--P. [4] of cover.

Local Features in Natural Images via Singularity Theory

Local Features in Natural Images via Singularity Theory
Author: James Damon
Publisher: Springer
Total Pages: 255
Release: 2016-09-30
Genre: Mathematics
ISBN: 3319414712

This monograph considers a basic problem in the computer analysis of natural images, which are images of scenes involving multiple objects that are obtained by a camera lens or a viewer’s eye. The goal is to detect geometric features of objects in the image and to separate regions of the objects with distinct visual properties. When the scene is illuminated by a single principal light source, we further include the visual clues resulting from the interaction of the geometric features of objects, the shade/shadow regions on the objects, and the “apparent contours”. We do so by a mathematical analysis using a repertoire of methods in singularity theory. This is applied for generic light directions of both the “stable configurations” for these interactions, whose features remain unchanged under small viewer movement, and the generic changes which occur under changes of view directions. These may then be used to differentiate between objects and determine their shapes and positions.