4,373 research outputs found
A Review of Wireless Sensor Networks with Cognitive Radio Techniques and Applications
The advent of Wireless Sensor Networks (WSNs) has inspired various sciences and telecommunication with its applications, there is a growing demand for robust methodologies that can ensure extended lifetime. Sensor nodes are small equipment which may hold less electrical energy and preserve it until they reach the destination of the network. The main concern is supposed to carry out sensor routing process along with transferring information. Choosing the best route for transmission in a sensor node is necessary to reach the destination and conserve energy. Clustering in the network is considered to be an effective method for gathering of data and routing through the nodes in wireless sensor networks. The primary requirement is to extend network lifetime by minimizing the consumption of energy. Further integrating cognitive radio technique into sensor networks, that can make smart choices based on knowledge acquisition, reasoning, and information sharing may support the network's complete purposes amid the presence of several limitations and optimal targets. This examination focuses on routing and clustering using metaheuristic techniques and machine learning because these characteristics have a detrimental impact on cognitive radio wireless sensor node lifetime
Solution structure of the inner DysF domain of myoferlin and implications for limb girdle muscular dystrophy type 2b
Mutations in the protein dysferlin, a member of the ferlin family, lead to limb girdle muscular dystrophy type 2B and Myoshi myopathy. The ferlins are large proteins characterised by multiple C2 domains and a single C-terminal membrane-spanning helix. However, there is sequence conservation in some of the ferlin family in regions outside the C2 domains. In one annotation of the domain structure of these proteins, an unusual internal duplication event has been noted where a putative domain is inserted in between the N- and C-terminal parts of a homologous domain. This domain is known as the DysF domain. Here, we present the solution structure of the inner DysF domain of the dysferlin paralogue myoferlin, which has a unique fold held together by stacking of arginine and tryptophans, mutations that lead to clinical disease in dysferlin
Department of Computer Science Activity 1998-2004
This report summarizes much of the research and teaching activity of the Department of Computer Science at Dartmouth College between late 1998 and late 2004. The material for this report was collected as part of the final report for NSF Institutional Infrastructure award EIA-9802068, which funded equipment and technical staff during that six-year period. This equipment and staff supported essentially all of the department\u27s research activity during that period
Machine Learning and Deep Learning Approaches for Brain Disease Diagnosis : Principles and Recent Advances
This work was supported in part by the National Research Foundation of Korea-Grant funded by the Korean Government (Ministry of Science and ICT) under Grant NRF 2020R1A2B5B02002478, and in part by Sejong University through its Faculty Research Program under Grant 20212023.Peer reviewedPublisher PD
The Internet of Everything
In the era before IoT, the world wide web, internet, web 2.0 and social media made people’s lives comfortable by providing web services and enabling access personal data irrespective of their location. Further, to save time and improve efficiency, there is a need for machine to machine communication, automation, smart computing and ubiquitous access to personal devices. This need gave birth to the phenomenon of Internet of Things (IoT) and further to the concept of Internet of Everything (IoE)
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Digital phenotyping through multimodal, unobtrusive sensing
The growing adoption of multimodal wearable and mobile devices, such as smartphones and wrist-worn watches has generated an increase in the collection of physiological and behavioural data at scale. This digital phenotyping data enables researchers to make inferences regarding users’ physical and mental health at scale, for the first time. However, translating this data into actionable insights requires computational approaches that turn unlabelled, multimodal time-series sensor data into validated measures that can be interpreted at scale.
This thesis describes the derivation of novel computational methods that leverage digital phenotyping data from wearable devices in large-scale populations to infer physical behaviours. These methods combine insights from signal processing, data mining and machine learning alongside domain knowledge in physical activity and sleep epidemiology. First, the inference of sleeping windows in free-living conditions through a heart rate sensing approach is explored. This algorithm is particularly valuable in the absence of ground truth or sleep diaries given its simplicity, adaptability and capacity for personalization. I then explore multistage sleep classification through combined movement and cardiac wearable sensing and machine learning. Further, I demonstrate that postural changes detected through wrist accelerometers can inform habitual behaviours and are valuable complements to traditional, intensity-based physical activity metrics. I then leverage the concomitant responses of heart rate to physical activity that can be captured through multimodal wearable sensors through a self-supervised training task. The resulting embeddings from this task are shown to be useful for the downstream classification of demographic factors, BMI, energy expenditure and cardiorespiratory fitness. Finally, I describe a deep learning model for the adaptive inference of cardiorespiratory fitness (VO2max) using wearable data in free living conditions. I demonstrate the robustness of the model in a large UK population and show the models’ adaptability by evaluating its performance in a subset of the population with repeated measures ~6 years after the original recordings.
Together, this work increases the potential of multimodal wearable and mobile sensors for physical activity and behavioural inferences in population studies. In particular, this thesis showcases the potential of using wearable devices to make valuable physical activity, sleep and fitness inferences in large cohort studies. Given the nature of the data collected and the fact that most of this data is currently generated by commercial providers and not research institutes, laying the foundations for responsible data governance and ethical use of these technologies will be critical to building trust and enabling the development of the field of digital phenotyping.I was funded by GlaxoSmithKline and the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council. I was also supported by the Alan Turing Institute through their Enrichment Scheme
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