511 research outputs found

    Report from the MPP Working Group to the NASA Associate Administrator for Space Science and Applications

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    NASA's Office of Space Science and Applications (OSSA) gave a select group of scientists the opportunity to test and implement their computational algorithms on the Massively Parallel Processor (MPP) located at Goddard Space Flight Center, beginning in late 1985. One year later, the Working Group presented its report, which addressed the following: algorithms, programming languages, architecture, programming environments, the way theory relates, and performance measured. The findings point to a number of demonstrated computational techniques for which the MPP architecture is ideally suited. For example, besides executing much faster on the MPP than on conventional computers, systolic VLSI simulation (where distances are short), lattice simulation, neural network simulation, and image problems were found to be easier to program on the MPP's architecture than on a CYBER 205 or even a VAX. The report also makes technical recommendations covering all aspects of MPP use, and recommendations concerning the future of the MPP and machines based on similar architectures, expansion of the Working Group, and study of the role of future parallel processors for space station, EOS, and the Great Observatories era

    Diagnosis and Prognosis of Occupational disorders based on Machine Learn- ing Techniques applied to Occupational Profiles

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    Work-related disorders have a global influence on people’s well-being and quality of life and are a financial burden for organizations because they reduce productivity, increase absenteeism, and promote early retirement. Work-related musculoskeletal disorders, in particular, represent a significant fraction of the total in all occupational contexts. In automotive and industrial settings where workers are exposed to work-related muscu- loskeletal disorders risk factors, occupational physicians are responsible for monitoring workers’ health protection profiles. Occupational technicians report in the Occupational Health Protection Profiles database to understand which exposure to occupational work- related musculoskeletal disorder risk factors should be ensured for a given worker. Occu- pational Health Protection Profiles databases describe the occupational physician states, and which exposure the physicians considers necessary to ensure the worker’s health protection in terms of their functional work ability. The application of Human-Centered explainable artificial intelligence can support the decision making to go from worker’s Functional Work Ability to explanations by integrating explainability into medical (re- striction) and supporting in two decision contexts: prognosis and diagnosis of individual, work related and organizational risk condition. Although previous machine learning ap- proaches provided good predictions, their application in an actual occupational setting is limited because their predictions are difficult to interpret and hence, not actionable. In this thesis, injured body parts in which the ability changed in a worker’s functional work ability status are targeted. On the one hand, artificial intelligence algorithms can help technical teams, occupational physicians, and ergonomists determine a worker’s workplace risk via the diagnosis and prognosis of body part(s) injuries; on the other hand, these approaches can help prevent work-related musculoskeletal disorders by identifying which processes are lacking in working condition improvement and which workplaces have a better match between the remaining functional work abilities. A sample of 2025 for the prognosis part (from the years of 2019 to 2020) and 7857 for the prognosis part of Occupational Health Protection Profiles based on Functional Work Ability textual re- ports in the Portuguese language in automotive industry factory. Machine learning-based Natural Language Processing methods were implemented to extract standardized infor- mation. The prognosis and diagnosis of Occupational Health Protection Profiles factors were developed in reliable Human-Centered explainable artificial intelligence system to promote a trustworthy Human-Centered explainable artificial intelligence system (enti- tled Industrial microErgo application). The most suitable regression models to predict the next medical appointment for the injured body regions were the models based on CatBoost regression, with R square and an RMSLE of 0.84 and 1.23 weeks, respectively. In parallel, CatBoost’s best regression model for most body parts is the prediction of the next injured body parts based on these two errors. This information can help tech- nical industrial teams understand potential risk factors for Occupational Health Protec- tion Profiles and identify warning signs of the early stages of musculoskeletal disorders.Os transtornos relacionados ao trabalho têm influência global no bem-estar e na quali- dade de vida das pessoas e são um ônus financeiro para as organizações, pois reduzem a produtividade, aumentam o absenteísmo e promovem a aposentadoria precoce. Os distúr- bios osteomusculares relacionados ao trabalho, em particular, representam uma fração significativa do total em todos os contextos ocupacionais. Em ambientes automotivos e industriais onde os trabalhadores estão expostos a fatores de risco de distúrbios osteomus- culares relacionados ao trabalho, os médicos do trabalho são responsáveis por monitorar os perfis de proteção à saúde dos trabalhadores. Os técnicos do trabalho reportam-se à base de dados dos Perfis de Proteção da Saúde Ocupacional para compreender quais os fatores de risco de exposição a perturbações músculo-esqueléticas relacionadas com o tra- balho que devem ser assegurados para um determinado trabalhador. As bases de dados de Perfis de Proteção à Saúde Ocupacional descrevem os estados do médico do trabalho e quais exposições os médicos consideram necessária para garantir a proteção da saúde do trabalhador em termos de sua capacidade funcional para o trabalho. A aplicação da inteligência artificial explicável centrada no ser humano pode apoiar a tomada de decisão para ir da capacidade funcional de trabalho do trabalhador às explicações, integrando a explicabilidade à médica (restrição) e apoiando em dois contextos de decisão: prognóstico e diagnóstico da condição de risco individual, relacionado ao trabalho e organizacional . Embora as abordagens anteriores de aprendizado de máquina tenham fornecido boas pre- visões, sua aplicação em um ambiente ocupacional real é limitada porque suas previsões são difíceis de interpretar e portanto, não acionável. Nesta tese, as partes do corpo lesiona- das nas quais a habilidade mudou no estado de capacidade funcional para o trabalho do trabalhador são visadas. Por um lado, os algoritmos de inteligência artificial podem aju- dar as equipes técnicas, médicos do trabalho e ergonomistas a determinar o risco no local de trabalho de um trabalhador por meio do diagnóstico e prognóstico de lesões em partes do corpo; por outro lado, essas abordagens podem ajudar a prevenir distúrbios muscu- loesqueléticos relacionados ao trabalho, identificando quais processos estão faltando na melhoria das condições de trabalho e quais locais de trabalho têm uma melhor correspon- dência entre as habilidades funcionais restantes do trabalho. Para esta tese, foi utilizada uma base de dados com Perfis de Proteção à Saúde Ocupacional, que se baseiam em relató- rios textuais de Aptidão para o Trabalho em língua portuguesa, de uma fábrica da indús- tria automóvel (Auto Europa). Uma amostra de 2025 ficheiros foi utilizada para a parte de prognóstico (de 2019 a 2020) e uma amostra de 7857 ficheiros foi utilizada para a parte de diagnóstico. . Aprendizado de máquina- métodos baseados em Processamento de Lingua- gem Natural foram implementados para extrair informações padronizadas. O prognóstico e diagnóstico dos fatores de Perfis de Proteção à Saúde Ocupacional foram desenvolvidos em um sistema confiável de inteligência artificial explicável centrado no ser humano (inti- tulado Industrial microErgo application). Os modelos de regressão mais adequados para prever a próxima consulta médica para as regiões do corpo lesionadas foram os modelos baseados na regressão CatBoost, com R quadrado e RMSLE de 0,84 e 1,23 semanas, res- pectivamente. Em paralelo, a previsão das próximas partes do corpo lesionadas com base nesses dois erros relatados pelo CatBoost como o melhor modelo de regressão para a mai- oria das partes do corpo. Essas informações podem ajudar as equipes técnicas industriais a entender os possíveis fatores de risco para os Perfis de Proteção à Saúde Ocupacio- nal e identificar sinais de alerta dos estágios iniciais de distúrbios musculoesqueléticos

    Discovering a Domain Knowledge Representation for Image Grouping: Multimodal Data Modeling, Fusion, and Interactive Learning

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    In visually-oriented specialized medical domains such as dermatology and radiology, physicians explore interesting image cases from medical image repositories for comparative case studies to aid clinical diagnoses, educate medical trainees, and support medical research. However, general image classification and retrieval approaches fail in grouping medical images from the physicians\u27 viewpoint. This is because fully-automated learning techniques cannot yet bridge the gap between image features and domain-specific content for the absence of expert knowledge. Understanding how experts get information from medical images is therefore an important research topic. As a prior study, we conducted data elicitation experiments, where physicians were instructed to inspect each medical image towards a diagnosis while describing image content to a student seated nearby. Experts\u27 eye movements and their verbal descriptions of the image content were recorded to capture various aspects of expert image understanding. This dissertation aims at an intuitive approach to extracting expert knowledge, which is to find patterns in expert data elicited from image-based diagnoses. These patterns are useful to understand both the characteristics of the medical images and the experts\u27 cognitive reasoning processes. The transformation from the viewed raw image features to interpretation as domain-specific concepts requires experts\u27 domain knowledge and cognitive reasoning. This dissertation also approximates this transformation using a matrix factorization-based framework, which helps project multiple expert-derived data modalities to high-level abstractions. To combine additional expert interventions with computational processing capabilities, an interactive machine learning paradigm is developed to treat experts as an integral part of the learning process. Specifically, experts refine medical image groups presented by the learned model locally, to incrementally re-learn the model globally. This paradigm avoids the onerous expert annotations for model training, while aligning the learned model with experts\u27 sense-making

    Paper Session I-B - Reverse Engineering of Biological Gravity-Sensing Organs: Neurocomputational and Biomedical Implications

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    As humans began to project themselves into the environment of interplanetary space during the early 1960s, it was clear that the opening of this new frontier would require a comprehensive understanding of the effects of near-weightlessness (microgravity) on biological organisms. After all, life on planet Earth has evolved under the stable and pervasive influence of gravity. In terrestrial ecosystems, a force of one gravitational unit represents a continuous epigenetic agent that affects living systems at levels ranging from the morphogenetic to the behavioral2. However, an unexpected, beneficial outcome of research in gravitational biology and medicine is that it not only improves the conditions and prospects for space travelers, but it also results in enhanced knowledge that could contribute to the solution of physiological and biomedical problems for humans here on Earth3. Several Space Shuttle missions over the past decade have included experiments aimed at improving our understanding of the effect of microgravity on living organisms. For instance, the recent orbiter Columbia mission Neurolab (STS-90), proposed at the beginning of this ÒDecade of the BrainÓ, focused on basic neuroscience questions which will not only expand our understanding of how the nervous system develops and functions in space, but also increase our knowledge about how it develops and functions on Earth, thus contributing to the study and treatment of neurological diseases and disorders

    Knowledge extraction from unstructured data

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    Data availability is becoming more essential, considering the current growth of web-based data. The data available on the web are represented as unstructured, semi-structured, or structured data. In order to make the web-based data available for several Natural Language Processing or Data Mining tasks, the data needs to be presented as machine-readable data in a structured format. Thus, techniques for addressing the problem of capturing knowledge from unstructured data sources are needed. Knowledge extraction methods are used by the research communities to address this problem; methods that are able to capture knowledge in a natural language text and map the extracted knowledge to existing knowledge presented in knowledge graphs (KGs). These knowledge extraction methods include Named-entity recognition, Named-entity Disambiguation, Relation Recognition, and Relation Linking. This thesis addresses the problem of extracting knowledge over unstructured data and discovering patterns in the extracted knowledge. We devise a rule-based approach for entity and relation recognition and linking. The defined approach effectively maps entities and relations within a text to their resources in a target KG. Additionally, it overcomes the challenges of recognizing and linking entities and relations to a specific KG by employing devised catalogs of linguistic and domain-specific rules that state the criteria to recognize entities in a sentence of a particular language, and a deductive database that encodes knowledge in community-maintained KGs. Moreover, we define a Neuro-symbolic approach for the tasks of knowledge extraction in encyclopedic and domain-specific domains; it combines symbolic and sub-symbolic components to overcome the challenges of entity recognition and linking and the limitation of the availability of training data while maintaining the accuracy of recognizing and linking entities. Additionally, we present a context-aware framework for unveiling semantically related posts in a corpus; it is a knowledge-driven framework that retrieves associated posts effectively. We cast the problem of unveiling semantically related posts in a corpus into the Vertex Coloring Problem. We evaluate the performance of our techniques on several benchmarks related to various domains for knowledge extraction tasks. Furthermore, we apply these methods in real-world scenarios from national and international projects. The outcomes show that our techniques are able to effectively extract knowledge encoded in unstructured data and discover patterns over the extracted knowledge presented as machine-readable data. More importantly, the evaluation results provide evidence to the effectiveness of combining the reasoning capacity of the symbolic frameworks with the power of pattern recognition and classification of sub-symbolic models

    Use of Artificial Intelligence in Healthcare Delivery

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    In recent years, there has been an amplified focus on the use of artificial intelligence (AI) in various domains to resolve complex issues. Likewise, the adoption of artificial intelligence (AI) in healthcare is growing while radically changing the face of healthcare delivery. AI is being employed in a myriad of settings including hospitals, clinical laboratories, and research facilities. AI approaches employing machines to sense and comprehend data like humans has opened up previously unavailable or unrecognised opportunities for clinical practitioners and health service organisations. Some examples include utilising AI approaches to analyse unstructured data such as photos, videos, physician notes to enable clinical decision making; use of intelligence interfaces to enhance patient engagement and compliance with treatment; and predictive modelling to manage patient flow and hospital capacity/resource allocation. Yet, there is an incomplete understanding of AI and even confusion as to what it is? Also, it is not completely clear what the implications are in using AI generally and in particular for clinicians? This chapter aims to cover these topics and also introduce the reader to the concept of AI, the theories behind AI programming and the various applications of AI in the medical domain

    Machine Learning in Tribology

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    Tribology has been and continues to be one of the most relevant fields, being present in almost all aspects of our lives. The understanding of tribology provides us with solutions for future technical challenges. At the root of all advances made so far are multitudes of precise experiments and an increasing number of advanced computer simulations across different scales and multiple physical disciplines. Based upon this sound and data-rich foundation, advanced data handling, analysis and learning methods can be developed and employed to expand existing knowledge. Therefore, modern machine learning (ML) or artificial intelligence (AI) methods provide opportunities to explore the complex processes in tribological systems and to classify or quantify their behavior in an efficient or even real-time way. Thus, their potential also goes beyond purely academic aspects into actual industrial applications. To help pave the way, this article collection aimed to present the latest research on ML or AI approaches for solving tribology-related issues generating true added value beyond just buzzwords. In this sense, this Special Issue can support researchers in identifying initial selections and best practice solutions for ML in tribology

    The Artificial Intelligence in Digital Pathology and Digital Radiology: Where Are We?

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    This book is a reprint of the Special Issue entitled "The Artificial Intelligence in Digital Pathology and Digital Radiology: Where Are We?". Artificial intelligence is extending into the world of both digital radiology and digital pathology, and involves many scholars in the areas of biomedicine, technology, and bioethics. There is a particular need for scholars to focus on both the innovations in this field and the problems hampering integration into a robust and effective process in stable health care models in the health domain. Many professionals involved in these fields of digital health were encouraged to contribute with their experiences. This book contains contributions from various experts across different fields. Aspects of the integration in the health domain have been faced. Particular space was dedicated to overviewing the challenges, opportunities, and problems in both radiology and pathology. Clinal deepens are available in cardiology, the hystopathology of breast cancer, and colonoscopy. Dedicated studies were based on surveys which investigated students and insiders, opinions, attitudes, and self-perception on the integration of artificial intelligence in this field
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