239 research outputs found
The Translocal Event and the Polyrhythmic Diagram
This thesis identifies and analyses the key creative protocols in translocal performance practice, and ends with suggestions for new forms of transversal live and mediated
performance practice, informed by theory. It argues that ontologies of emergence in dynamic systems nourish contemporary practice in the digital arts. Feedback
in self-organised, recursive systems and organisms elicit change, and change transforms. The arguments trace concepts from chaos and complexity theory to virtual multiplicity, relationality, intuition and individuation (in the work of Bergson, Deleuze, Guattari, Simondon, Massumi, and other process theorists). It then examines the intersection of methodologies in philosophy, science and art and the
radical contingencies implicit in the technicity of real-time, collaborative composition. Simultaneous forces or tendencies such as perception/memory, content/
expression and instinct/intellect produce composites (experience, meaning, and intuition- respectively) that affect the sensation of interplay. The translocal
event is itself a diagram - an interstice between the forces of the local and the global, between the tendencies of the individual and the collective. The translocal is
a point of reference for exploring the distribution of affect, parameters of control and emergent aesthetics. Translocal interplay, enabled by digital technologies and network protocols, is ontogenetic and autopoietic; diagrammatic and synaesthetic; intuitive and transductive. KeyWorx is a software application developed for realtime, distributed, multimodal media processing. As a technological tool created by artists, KeyWorx supports this intuitive type of creative experience: a real-time, translocal âjammingâ that transduces the lived experience of a âbiogram,â a synaesthetic hinge-dimension. The emerging aesthetics are processual â intuitive, diagrammatic and transversal
18th IEEE Workshop on Nonlinear Dynamics of Electronic Systems: Proceedings
Proceedings of the 18th IEEE Workshop on Nonlinear Dynamics of Electronic Systems, which took place in Dresden, Germany, 26 â 28 May 2010.:Welcome Address ........................ Page I
Table of Contents ........................ Page III
Symposium Committees .............. Page IV
Special Thanks ............................. Page V
Conference program (incl. page numbers of papers)
................... Page VI
Conference papers
Invited talks ................................ Page 1
Regular Papers ........................... Page 14
Wednesday, May 26th, 2010 ......... Page 15
Thursday, May 27th, 2010 .......... Page 110
Friday, May 28th, 2010 ............... Page 210
Author index ............................... Page XII
Decoding attentional load in visual perception: a signal processing approach
Previous research has established that visual perception tasks high in attentional load (or âperceptual loadâ, defined operationally to include either a larger number of items or a greater perceptual processing demand) result in reduced perceptual sensitivity and cortical response for visual stimuli outside the focus of attention. However, there are three challenges facing the load theory of attention today. The first is to describe a neural mechanism by which load-induced perceptual deficits are explained; the second is to clarify the concept of perceptual load and develop a method for estimating the load induced by a visual task a priori, without recourse to measures of secondary perceptual effects; and the third is to extend the study of attentional load to natural, real-world, visual tasks. In this thesis we employ signal processing and machine learning approaches to address these challenges. In Chapters 3 and 4 it is shown that high perceptual load degrades the perception of orientation by modulating the tuning curves of neural populations in early visual cortex. The combination of tuning curve modulations reported is unique to perceptual load, inducing broadened tuning as well as reductions in tuning amplitude and overall neural activity, and so provides a novel low-level mechanism for behaviourally relevant failures of vision such as inattentional blindness. In Chapter 5, a predictive model of perceptual load during the task of driving is produced. The high variation in perceptual demands during real-world driving allow the construction of a direct fine-scale mapping between high-resolution natural imagery, captured from a driver's point-of-view, and induced perceptual load. The model therefore constitutes the first system able to produce a priori estimates of load directly from visual characteristics of a natural task, extending research into the antecedents of perceptual load beyond the realm of austere laboratory displays. Taken together, the findings of this thesis represent major theoretical advances into both the causes and effects of high perceptual load
Going Deep in Medical Image Analysis: Concepts, Methods, Challenges and Future Directions
Medical Image Analysis is currently experiencing a paradigm shift due to Deep
Learning. This technology has recently attracted so much interest of the
Medical Imaging community that it led to a specialized conference in `Medical
Imaging with Deep Learning' in the year 2018. This article surveys the recent
developments in this direction, and provides a critical review of the related
major aspects. We organize the reviewed literature according to the underlying
Pattern Recognition tasks, and further sub-categorize it following a taxonomy
based on human anatomy. This article does not assume prior knowledge of Deep
Learning and makes a significant contribution in explaining the core Deep
Learning concepts to the non-experts in the Medical community. Unique to this
study is the Computer Vision/Machine Learning perspective taken on the advances
of Deep Learning in Medical Imaging. This enables us to single out `lack of
appropriately annotated large-scale datasets' as the core challenge (among
other challenges) in this research direction. We draw on the insights from the
sister research fields of Computer Vision, Pattern Recognition and Machine
Learning etc.; where the techniques of dealing with such challenges have
already matured, to provide promising directions for the Medical Imaging
community to fully harness Deep Learning in the future
Radar Technology
In this book âRadar Technologyâ, the chapters are divided into four main topic areas: Topic area 1: âRadar Systemsâ consists of chapters which treat whole radar systems, environment and target functional chain. Topic area 2: âRadar Applicationsâ shows various applications of radar systems, including meteorological radars, ground penetrating radars and glaciology. Topic area 3: âRadar Functional Chain and Signal Processingâ describes several aspects of the radar signal processing. From parameter extraction, target detection over tracking and classification technologies. Topic area 4: âRadar Subsystems and Componentsâ consists of design technology of radar subsystem components like antenna design or waveform design
Machine Learning As Tool And Theory For Computational Neuroscience
Computational neuroscience is in the midst of constructing a new framework for understanding the brain based on the ideas and methods of machine learning. This is effort has been encouraged, in part, by recent advances in neural network models. It is also driven by a recognition of the complexity of neural computation and the challenges that this poses for neuroscienceâs methods. In this dissertation, I first work to describe these problems of complexity that have prompted a shift in focus. In particular, I develop machine learning tools for neurophysiology that help test whether tuning curves and other statistical models in fact capture the meaning of neural activity. Then, taking up a machine learning framework for understanding, I consider theories about how neural computation emerges from experience. Specifically, I develop hypotheses about the potential learning objectives of sensory plasticity, the potential learning algorithms in the brain, and finally the consequences for sensory representations of learning with such algorithms. These hypotheses pull from advances in several areas of machine learning, including optimization, representation learning, and deep learning theory. Each of these subfields has insights for neuroscience, offering up links for a chain of knowledge about how we learn and think. Together, this dissertation helps to further an understanding of the brain in the lens of machine learning
The temporal pattern of impulses in primary afferents analogously encodes touch and hearing information
An open question in neuroscience is the contribution of temporal relations between individual impulses in primary afferents in conveying sensory information. We investigated this question in touch and hearing, while looking for any shared coding scheme. In both systems, we artificially induced temporally diverse afferent impulse trains and probed the evoked perceptions in human subjects using psychophysical techniques.
First, we investigated whether the temporal structure of a fixed number of impulses conveys information about the magnitude of tactile intensity. We found that clustering the impulses into periodic bursts elicited graded increases of intensity as a function of burst impulse count, even though fewer afferents were recruited throughout the longer bursts.
The interval between successive bursts of peripheral neural activity (the burst-gap) has been demonstrated in our lab to be the most prominent temporal feature for coding skin vibration frequency, as opposed to either spike rate or periodicity. Given the similarities between tactile and auditory systems, second, we explored the auditory system for an equivalent neural coding strategy. By using brief acoustic pulses, we showed that the burst-gap is a shared temporal code for pitch perception between the modalities.
Following this evidence of parallels in temporal frequency processing, we next assessed the perceptual frequency equivalence between the two modalities using auditory and tactile pulse stimuli of simple and complex temporal features in cross-sensory frequency discrimination experiments. Identical temporal stimulation patterns in tactile and auditory afferents produced equivalent perceived frequencies, suggesting an analogous temporal frequency computation mechanism.
The new insights into encoding tactile intensity through clustering of fixed charge electric pulses into bursts suggest a novel approach to convey varying contact forces to neural interface users, requiring no modulation of either stimulation current or base pulse frequency. Increasing control of the temporal patterning of pulses in cochlear implant users might improve pitch perception and speech comprehension. The perceptual correspondence between touch and hearing not only suggests the possibility of establishing cross-modal comparison standards for robust psychophysical investigations, but also supports the plausibility of cross-sensory substitution devices
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Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging of Breast Cancer
This thesis examines the use of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) techniques in the detection of breast cancer and the prediction of pathological complete response (pCR) to neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NACT).
This thesis compares the diagnostic performance of diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) models in the breast using a systematic review and meta-analysis. Advanced diffusion models have been proposed that may improve the performance of standard DWI using the apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) to discriminate between malignant and benign breast lesions. Pooling the results from 73 studies, comparable diagnostic accuracy is shown using the ADC and parameters from the intra-voxel incoherent motion (IVIM) and diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) models. This work highlights a lack of standardisation in DWI protocols and methodology. Conventional acquisition techniques used in DWI often suffer from image artefacts and low spatial resolution. A multi-shot DWI technique, multiplexed sensitivity encoding (MUSE), can improve the image quality of DWI. A MUSE protocol has been optimised through a series of phantom experiments and validated in 20 patients. Comparing MUSE to conventional DWI, statistically significant improvements are shown in distortion and blurring metrics and qualitative image quality metrics such as lesion conspicuity and diagnostic confidence, increasing the clinical utility of DWI.
This thesis investigates the use of dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI (DCE-MRI) in the detection of breast cancer and the prediction of pCR. Abbreviated MRI (ABB-MRI) protocols have gained increasing attention for the detection of breast cancer, acquiring a shortened version of a full diagnostic protocol (FDP-MRI) in a fraction of the time, reducing the cost of the examination. The diagnostic performance of abbreviated and full diagnostic protocols is systematically compared using a meta-analysis. Pooling 13 studies, equivalent diagnostic accuracy is shown for ABB-MRI in cohorts enriched with cancers, and lower but not significantly different diagnostic performance is shown in screening cohorts.
Higher order imaging features derived from pre-treatment DCE-MRI could be used to predict pCR and inform decisions regarding targeted treatment, avoiding unnecessary toxicity. Using data from 152 patients undergoing NACT, radiomics features are extracted from baseline DCE-MRI and machine learning models trained to predict pCR with moderate accuracy. The stability of feature selection using logistic regression classification is demonstrated and a comparison of models trained using features from different time points in the dynamic series demonstrates that a full dynamic series enables the most accurate prediction of pCR.GE Healthcare funded PhD Studentshi
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