Barrou Diallo
University of Caen Lower Normandy
10 Papers
55 Citations
Barrou Diallo is an academic researcher from University of Caen Lower Normandy. The author has contributed to research in topics: Field (computer science) & Intellectual property. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 10 publications.
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Papers
Towards content-oriented patent document processing
Leo Wanner,Leo Wanner,Ricardo Baeza-Yates,Ricardo Baeza-Yates,Sören Brügmann,Joan Codina,Barrou Diallo,Enric Escorsa,Mark Giereth,Yiannis Kompatsiaris,Symeon Papadopoulos,Emanuele Pianta,Gemma Piella,Ingo Puhlmann,Gautam Rao,Martin Rotard,Pia Schoester,Luciano Serafini,Vasiliki Zervaki +18 more
TL;DR: The central assumption underlying PATExpert is that in order to meet the needs of the users of patent processing services, recourse must be made to the content of patent material.
104
Anatomical congruence of metabolic and electromagnetic activation signals during a self-paced motor task: a combined PET-MEG study.
TL;DR: Results show that PET and MEG MEF1 activation signals spatially coincide within instrumental, registration, and modeling errors.
31
VoxeLine: a software program for 3D real-time visualization of biomedical images
TL;DR: The architecture and implementation of VoxeLine, a new interactive environment for display and analysis of 2D and 3D images in real-time, is discussed and its ability to show datasets in all directions without duplicating data into the main memory is discussed.
22
Historical perspectives on IP protection for software in selected countries worldwide
TL;DR: In this article, progress on the important issue of protection of software through intellectual property laws is examined in selected states outside the trilateral partners (US, European and Japanese Patent Offices), including Russia, China, Taiwan, India, Israel, Lebanon, Jordan, Ethiopia and South Africa.
18
B‐SPID: An object‐relational database architecture to store, retrieve, and manipulate neuroimaging data
TL;DR: The B‐SPID project, here discussed, concerns the processing of neuroimages and attached components stored in an object‐relational multimedia database management system (DBMS).