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FOR RELEASE: Tuesday, November 25, 2003
FULL SPEED AHEAD FOR HIGHWAY MAINTENANCE
Traditionally, distress data for highway maintenance has been acquired by hand - transportation department employees in many states walk over every mile of road annually or biannually. They either rate the pavements while walking or record the pavement images and manually rate the images in office. The system developed by Wang and his staff can automatically identify and classify pavement surface cracks while the images of pavements are acquired. Wang's digital solution makes this information readily available to the engineers who must make critical maintenance and rehabilitation decisions. "Traditional systems are limited by accessibility, search capability of the image library, and synchronizing video data with traditional engineering data," explained Wang. "More importantly, there are situations in which multiple users need to examine the video footage at the same time." DHDV uses digital cameras to record highway surfaces in real time and store the information directly on computer drives. The images are processed and added to critical maintenance information such as when the highway was built, what materials were used, when maintenance was performed and traffic patterns. These data are then readily available to the engineers who must make critical maintenance decisions. With Wang's system, high-definition images of pavement surfaces are directly captured, archived and analyzed by computers. By applying image-processing techniques to these digital images, engineers can easily identify distresses in the roadway and determine the exact scope of the problem. Distress objects such as cracks can then be classified according to length, width, orientation or other predefined categories. "The DHDV can look at the entire width of a lane at highway speed and at 1 millimeter resolution without sub-sampling," said Wang. He believes the new DHDV breaks the record for its data collection and processing capabilities in terms of complete coverage of pavement, resolution and automated processing for cracks. DHDV uses custom-fabricated lights that are brighter than sunlight and eliminate the need for strobe lighting or shuttering. They also allow data acquisition at night as well as in the day, which is not easy with other available methods. "To the best of my knowledge, DHDV is the only system in the world today that has 1 millimeter resolution, complete lane coverage and automation in cracking survey," Wang said. ### Contact:Kelvin Wang, professor of civil engineering, (501) 575-8425, kcw@engr.uark.edu Carolyne Garcia, science and research communication officer, (501) 575-5555, cgarcia@comp.uark.edu
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