49,017 research outputs found
Brain enhancement through cognitive training: A new insight from brain connectome
Owing to the recent advances in neurotechnology and the progress in understanding of brain cognitive functions, improvements of cognitive performance or acceleration of learning process with brain enhancement systems is not out of our reach anymore, on the contrary, it is a tangible target of contemporary research. Although a variety of approaches have been proposed, we will mainly focus on cognitive training interventions, in which learners repeatedly perform cognitive tasks to improve their cognitive abilities. In this review article, we propose that the learning process during the cognitive training can be facilitated by an assistive system monitoring cognitive workloads using electroencephalography (EEG) biomarkers, and the brain connectome approach can provide additional valuable biomarkers for facilitating leaners' learning processes. For the purpose, we will introduce studies on the cognitive training interventions, EEG biomarkers for cognitive workload, and human brain connectome. As cognitive overload and mental fatigue would reduce or even eliminate gains of cognitive training interventions, a real-time monitoring of cognitive workload can facilitate the learning process by flexibly adjusting difficulty levels of the training task. Moreover, cognitive training interventions should have effects on brain sub-networks, not on a single brain region, and graph theoretical network metrics quantifying topological architecture of the brain network can differentiate with respect to individual cognitive states as well as to different individuals' cognitive abilities, suggesting that the connectome is a valuable approach for tracking the learning progress. Although only a few studies have exploited the connectome approach for studying alterations of the brain network induced by cognitive training interventions so far, we believe that it would be a useful technique for capturing improvements of cognitive function
Enhancing the significance of gravitational wave bursts through signal classification
The quest to observe gravitational waves challenges our ability to
discriminate signals from detector noise. This issue is especially relevant for
transient gravitational waves searches with a robust eyes wide open approach,
the so called all- sky burst searches. Here we show how signal classification
methods inspired by broad astrophysical characteristics can be implemented in
all-sky burst searches preserving their generality. In our case study, we apply
a multivariate analyses based on artificial neural networks to classify waves
emitted in compact binary coalescences. We enhance by orders of magnitude the
significance of signals belonging to this broad astrophysical class against the
noise background. Alternatively, at a given level of mis-classification of
noise events, we can detect about 1/4 more of the total signal population. We
also show that a more general strategy of signal classification can actually be
performed, by testing the ability of artificial neural networks in
discriminating different signal classes. The possible impact on future
observations by the LIGO-Virgo network of detectors is discussed by analysing
recoloured noise from previous LIGO-Virgo data with coherent WaveBurst, one of
the flagship pipelines dedicated to all-sky searches for transient
gravitational waves
Light Gated Recurrent Units for Speech Recognition
A field that has directly benefited from the recent advances in deep learning
is Automatic Speech Recognition (ASR). Despite the great achievements of the
past decades, however, a natural and robust human-machine speech interaction
still appears to be out of reach, especially in challenging environments
characterized by significant noise and reverberation. To improve robustness,
modern speech recognizers often employ acoustic models based on Recurrent
Neural Networks (RNNs), that are naturally able to exploit large time contexts
and long-term speech modulations. It is thus of great interest to continue the
study of proper techniques for improving the effectiveness of RNNs in
processing speech signals.
In this paper, we revise one of the most popular RNN models, namely Gated
Recurrent Units (GRUs), and propose a simplified architecture that turned out
to be very effective for ASR. The contribution of this work is two-fold: First,
we analyze the role played by the reset gate, showing that a significant
redundancy with the update gate occurs. As a result, we propose to remove the
former from the GRU design, leading to a more efficient and compact single-gate
model. Second, we propose to replace hyperbolic tangent with ReLU activations.
This variation couples well with batch normalization and could help the model
learn long-term dependencies without numerical issues.
Results show that the proposed architecture, called Light GRU (Li-GRU), not
only reduces the per-epoch training time by more than 30% over a standard GRU,
but also consistently improves the recognition accuracy across different tasks,
input features, noisy conditions, as well as across different ASR paradigms,
ranging from standard DNN-HMM speech recognizers to end-to-end CTC models.Comment: Copyright 2018 IEE
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