This paper explains the development of a highly efficient progressive 3-D mesh geometry coder based on the region adaptive transform in the spectral mesh compression method. A hierarchical set partitioning technique, originally proposed for the efficient compression of wavelet transform coefficients in high performance wavelet based image coding methods, is proposed for the efficient compression of the coefficients of this transform. Experiments confirm that the proposed coder employing such a region adaptive transform has a high compression performance rarely achieved by other state of the art 3-D mesh geometry compression algorithms. A new, high performance fixed spectral basis method is also proposed for reducing the computational complexity of the transform. Many-to-one mappings are employed to relate the coded irregular mesh region to a regular mesh whose basis is used. To prevent loss of compression performance due to the low-pass nature of such mappings, transitions are made from transform based coding to spatial coding on a per region basis at high coding rates. Experimental results show the performance advantage of the newly proposed fixed spectral basis method over the original fixed spectral basis method in the literature that employs one-to-one mappings.
This study aims to examine whether there is an equivalence between the two different versions of Wisconsin Card Sorting Test (WCST) regarding psychometric properties on two distinct samples: individuals diagnosed with schizophrenia and those who are healthy. A total of 504 individuals were included in the study, 243 were diagnosed with schizophrenia, and 261 were healthy individuals. Both samples were separated into two subsamples, and the individuals in each separated group were administered either WCST-C (computerized) or WCST-M (manual) version of the test. We compared statistical measures of mean and variance with the data obtained from the two samples. We carried out analyses related to parallel forms reliability and equality of variances of the tests scores produced by parallel forms of the WCST. There was no significant difference between mean values of manual and computerized versions administered for each sample. However, the patterns of variances of the obtained scores were dissimilar. According to these findings, the two versions were found to be inequivalent regarding psychometric properties.
Public Significance StatementThis study suggests that the manual and computerized versions of the Wisconsin Card Sorting Test are not equivalent regarding psychometric properties. The findings should guide the practitioners on which test version to choose for a particular target group to evaluate their executive functions.
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