2019
DOI: 10.1016/j.promfg.2020.01.277
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A Study on the Effect of Defect Shape on Defect Detection in Visual Inspection

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Cited by 4 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…Thus, the goal of tactile inspection is to detect defects such as distortion in shape or unevenness of surfaces by scanning the part using the palm of the hand, fingertips, or even fingernails to detect discontinuities with sizes on the order of a few micrometres [15]. Such minute irregularities are not always visible to the human eye, and their detectability highly depends on the individual visual acuity of each inspector and the size, contrast, colour, illumination, and shape of the defect [7,18,19]. Likewise, tactile inspection depends on individual touch perception, but also on whether gloves are worn during the inspection process and on defect-related characteristics such as size and shape, e.g., sharp versus soft edges [11].…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Thus, the goal of tactile inspection is to detect defects such as distortion in shape or unevenness of surfaces by scanning the part using the palm of the hand, fingertips, or even fingernails to detect discontinuities with sizes on the order of a few micrometres [15]. Such minute irregularities are not always visible to the human eye, and their detectability highly depends on the individual visual acuity of each inspector and the size, contrast, colour, illumination, and shape of the defect [7,18,19]. Likewise, tactile inspection depends on individual touch perception, but also on whether gloves are worn during the inspection process and on defect-related characteristics such as size and shape, e.g., sharp versus soft edges [11].…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These Many examples could be found of how optical checks are used in production. To perform high-quality control only visual human inspection is not enough since it relies on the experience of the inspector [13]. Furthermore, automation cannot be reached with such checks.…”
Section: Automatic Quality Controlmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Thus, nondestructive techniques (NDT) are popularly applied during inspections. The following are some of the more frequently used NDT methods 35 In 2019, 36 the researchers studied the different defect shapes on a surface to be inspected and derived the relationship between defect profile and defect detection rate by employing peripheral vision (luminance). The shapes of defects, their locations, and the characteristics of 12 objects were considered as the experimental data.…”
Section: Visual Inspectionmentioning
confidence: 99%