1,851 research outputs found
Feasibility of using Lodox to perform digital subtraction angiography
Bibliography: leaves 150-157.Many cases in trauma involve vessel imaging to determine integrity and the origin of lesions or blockages. Digital subtraction angiography (DSA) is a tool used to improve the clarity of the vessels being imaged for better and easier decision making in diagnostics and planning. Lodox, a low dose x-ray system developed by Debex (Pty) Ltd, a subsidiary of de Beers, was designed specifically for the trauma environment. It therefore follows that, if possible, a function so readily used in trauma, such as DSA, should be added to the imaging repertoire of an x-ray system designed for use in this environment. In this dissertation the feasibility of using Lodox to perform DSA is therefore explored. In doing so, the requirements of a trauma unit and the theory behind DSA were researched so as to obtain a better understanding into what would be required
Return of Frustratingly Easy Domain Adaptation
Unlike human learning, machine learning often fails to handle changes between
training (source) and test (target) input distributions. Such domain shifts,
common in practical scenarios, severely damage the performance of conventional
machine learning methods. Supervised domain adaptation methods have been
proposed for the case when the target data have labels, including some that
perform very well despite being "frustratingly easy" to implement. However, in
practice, the target domain is often unlabeled, requiring unsupervised
adaptation. We propose a simple, effective, and efficient method for
unsupervised domain adaptation called CORrelation ALignment (CORAL). CORAL
minimizes domain shift by aligning the second-order statistics of source and
target distributions, without requiring any target labels. Even though it is
extraordinarily simple--it can be implemented in four lines of Matlab
code--CORAL performs remarkably well in extensive evaluations on standard
benchmark datasets.Comment: Fixed typos. Full paper to appear in AAAI-16. Extended Abstract of
the full paper to appear in TASK-CV 2015 worksho
Dataset Condensation with Distribution Matching
Computational cost of training state-of-the-art deep models in many learning
problems is rapidly increasing due to more sophisticated models and larger
datasets. A recent promising direction for reducing training cost is dataset
condensation that aims to replace the original large training set with a
significantly smaller learned synthetic set while preserving the original
information. While training deep models on the small set of condensed images
can be extremely fast, their synthesis remains computationally expensive due to
the complex bi-level optimization and second-order derivative computation. In
this work, we propose a simple yet effective method that synthesizes condensed
images by matching feature distributions of the synthetic and original training
images in many sampled embedding spaces. Our method significantly reduces the
synthesis cost while achieving comparable or better performance. Thanks to its
efficiency, we apply our method to more realistic and larger datasets with
sophisticated neural architectures and obtain a significant performance boost.
We also show promising practical benefits of our method in continual learning
and neural architecture search
Facilitating motor imagery-based brain–computer interface for stroke patients using passive movement
Motor imagery-based brain–computer interface (MI-BCI) has been proposed as a rehabilitation tool to facilitate motor recovery in stroke. However, the calibration of a BCI system is a time-consuming and fatiguing process for stroke patients, which leaves reduced time for actual therapeutic interaction. Studies have shown that passive movement (PM) (i.e., the execution of a movement by an external agency without any voluntary motions) and motor imagery (MI) (i.e., the mental rehearsal of a movement without any activation of the muscles) induce similar EEG patterns over the motor cortex. Since performing PM is less fatiguing for the patients, this paper investigates the effectiveness of calibrating MI-BCIs from PM for stroke subjects in terms of classification accuracy. For this purpose, a new adaptive algorithm called filter bank data space adaptation (FB-DSA) is proposed. The FB-DSA algorithm linearly transforms the band-pass-filtered MI data such that the distribution difference between the MI and PM data is minimized. The effectiveness of the proposed algorithm is evaluated by an offline study on data collected from 16 healthy subjects and 6 stroke patients. The results show that the proposed FB-DSA algorithm significantly improved the classification accuracies of the PM and MI calibrated models (p < 0.05). According to the obtained classification accuracies, the PM calibrated models that were adapted using the proposed FB-DSA algorithm outperformed the MI calibrated models by an average of 2.3 and 4.5 % for the healthy and stroke subjects respectively. In addition, our results suggest that the disparity between MI and PM could be stronger in the stroke patients compared to the healthy subjects, and there would be thus an increased need to use the proposed FB-DSA algorithm in BCI-based stroke rehabilitation calibrated from PM
Enforcement in Dynamic Spectrum Access Systems
The spectrum access rights granted by the Federal government to spectrum users come with the expectation of protection from harmful interference. As a consequence of the growth of wireless demand and services of all types, technical progress enabling smart agile radio networks, and on-going spectrum management reform, there is both a need and opportunity to use and share spectrum more intensively and dynamically. A key element of any framework for managing harmful interference is the mechanism for enforcement of those rights. Since the rights to use spectrum and to protection from harmful interference vary by band (licensed/unlicensed, legacy/newly reformed) and type of use/users (primary/secondary, overlay/underlay), it is reasonable to expect that the enforcement mechanisms may need to vary as well.\ud
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In this paper, we present a taxonomy for evaluating alternative mechanisms for enforcing interference protection for spectrum usage rights, with special attention to the potential changes that may be expected from wider deployment of Dynamic Spectrum Access (DSA) systems. Our exploration of how the design of the enforcement regime interacts with and influences the incentives of radio operators under different rights regimes and market scenarios is intended to assist in refining thinking about appropriate access rights regimes and how best to incentivize investment and growth in more efficient and valuable uses of the radio frequency spectrum
Spectrum Sensing Security in Cognitive Radio Networks
This thesis explores the use of unsupervised machine learning for spectrum sensing in cognitive radio (CR) networks from a security perspective. CR is an enabling technology for dynamic spectrum access (DSA) because of a CR's ability to reconfigure itself in a smart way. CR can adapt and use unoccupied spectrum with the help of spectrum sensing and DSA. DSA is an efficient way to dynamically allocate white spaces (unutilized spectrum) to other CR users in order to tackle the spectrum scarcity problem and improve spectral efficiency. So far various techniques have been developed to efficiently detect and
classify signals in a DSA environment. Neural network techniques, especially those using unsupervised learning have some key advantages over other methods mainly because of the fact that minimal preconfiguration is required to sense the spectrum. However, recent results have shown some possible security vulnerabilities, which can be exploited by adversarial users to gain unrestricted access to spectrum by fooling signal classifiers. It is very important to address these new classes of security threats and challenges in order to make CR a long-term commercially viable concept.
This thesis identifies some key security vulnerabilities when unsupervised machine learning is used for spectrum sensing and also proposes mitigation techniques to counter the security threats. The simulation work demonstrates the ability of malicious user to manipulate signals in such a way to confuse signal classifier. The signal classifier is forced by the malicious user to draw incorrect decision boundaries by presenting signal features which are akin to a primary user. Hence, a malicious user is able to classify itself as a primary user and thus gains unrivaled access to the spectrum. First, performance of various classification algorithms are evaluated. K-means and weighted classification algorithms are selected because of their robustness against proposed attacks as compared to other classification algorithm. Second, connection attack, point cluster attack, and random noise attack are shown to have an adverse effect on classification algorithms. In the end, some mitigation techniques are proposed to counter the effect of these attacks
DREAM: Efficient Dataset Distillation by Representative Matching
Dataset distillation aims to synthesize small datasets with little
information loss from original large-scale ones for reducing storage and
training costs. Recent state-of-the-art methods mainly constrain the sample
synthesis process by matching synthetic images and the original ones regarding
gradients, embedding distributions, or training trajectories. Although there
are various matching objectives, currently the strategy for selecting original
images is limited to naive random sampling.
We argue that random sampling overlooks the evenness of the selected sample
distribution, which may result in noisy or biased matching targets.
Besides, the sample diversity is also not constrained by random sampling.
These factors together lead to optimization instability in the distilling
process and degrade the training efficiency. Accordingly, we propose a novel
matching strategy named as \textbf{D}ataset distillation by
\textbf{RE}present\textbf{A}tive \textbf{M}atching (DREAM), where only
representative original images are selected for matching. DREAM is able to be
easily plugged into popular dataset distillation frameworks and reduce the
distilling iterations by more than 8 times without performance drop. Given
sufficient training time, DREAM further provides significant improvements and
achieves state-of-the-art performances.Comment: Efficient matching for dataset distillatio
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