211 research outputs found

    Sensor Signal and Information Processing II

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    In the current age of information explosion, newly invented technological sensors and software are now tightly integrated with our everyday lives. Many sensor processing algorithms have incorporated some forms of computational intelligence as part of their core framework in problem solving. These algorithms have the capacity to generalize and discover knowledge for themselves and learn new information whenever unseen data are captured. The primary aim of sensor processing is to develop techniques to interpret, understand, and act on information contained in the data. The interest of this book is in developing intelligent signal processing in order to pave the way for smart sensors. This involves mathematical advancement of nonlinear signal processing theory and its applications that extend far beyond traditional techniques. It bridges the boundary between theory and application, developing novel theoretically inspired methodologies targeting both longstanding and emergent signal processing applications. The topic ranges from phishing detection to integration of terrestrial laser scanning, and from fault diagnosis to bio-inspiring filtering. The book will appeal to established practitioners, along with researchers and students in the emerging field of smart sensors processing

    Data-Driven Modeling For Decision Support Systems And Treatment Management In Personalized Healthcare

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    Massive amount of electronic medical records (EMRs) accumulating from patients and populations motivates clinicians and data scientists to collaborate for the advanced analytics to create knowledge that is essential to address the extensive personalized insights needed for patients, clinicians, providers, scientists, and health policy makers. Learning from large and complicated data is using extensively in marketing and commercial enterprises to generate personalized recommendations. Recently the medical research community focuses to take the benefits of big data analytic approaches and moves to personalized (precision) medicine. So, it is a significant period in healthcare and medicine for transferring to a new paradigm. There is a noticeable opportunity to implement a learning health care system and data-driven healthcare to make better medical decisions, better personalized predictions; and more precise discovering of risk factors and their interactions. In this research we focus on data-driven approaches for personalized medicine. We propose a research framework which emphasizes on three main phases: 1) Predictive modeling, 2) Patient subgroup analysis and 3) Treatment recommendation. Our goal is to develop novel methods for each phase and apply them in real-world applications. In the fist phase, we develop a new predictive approach based on feature representation using deep feature learning and word embedding techniques. Our method uses different deep architectures (Stacked autoencoders, Deep belief network and Variational autoencoders) for feature representation in higher-level abstractions to obtain effective and more robust features from EMRs, and then build prediction models on the top of them. Our approach is particularly useful when the unlabeled data is abundant whereas labeled one is scarce. We investigate the performance of representation learning through a supervised approach. We perform our method on different small and large datasets. Finally we provide a comparative study and show that our predictive approach leads to better results in comparison with others. In the second phase, we propose a novel patient subgroup detection method, called Supervised Biclustring (SUBIC) using convex optimization and apply our approach to detect patient subgroups and prioritize risk factors for hypertension (HTN) in a vulnerable demographic subgroup (African-American). Our approach not only finds patient subgroups with guidance of a clinically relevant target variable but also identifies and prioritizes risk factors by pursuing sparsity of the input variables and encouraging similarity among the input variables and between the input and target variables. Finally, in the third phase, we introduce a new survival analysis framework using deep learning and active learning with a novel sampling strategy. First, our approach provides better representation with lower dimensions from clinical features using labeled (time-to-event) and unlabeled (censored) instances and then actively trains the survival model by labeling the censored data using an oracle. As a clinical assistive tool, we propose a simple yet effective treatment recommendation approach based on our survival model. In the experimental study, we apply our approach on SEER-Medicare data related to prostate cancer among African-Americans and white patients. The results indicate that our approach outperforms significantly than baseline models

    Domain Generalization for Medical Image Analysis: A Survey

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    Medical Image Analysis (MedIA) has become an essential tool in medicine and healthcare, aiding in disease diagnosis, prognosis, and treatment planning, and recent successes in deep learning (DL) have made significant contributions to its advances. However, DL models for MedIA remain challenging to deploy in real-world situations, failing for generalization under the distributional gap between training and testing samples, known as a distribution shift problem. Researchers have dedicated their efforts to developing various DL methods to adapt and perform robustly on unknown and out-of-distribution data distributions. This paper comprehensively reviews domain generalization studies specifically tailored for MedIA. We provide a holistic view of how domain generalization techniques interact within the broader MedIA system, going beyond methodologies to consider the operational implications on the entire MedIA workflow. Specifically, we categorize domain generalization methods into data-level, feature-level, model-level, and analysis-level methods. We show how those methods can be used in various stages of the MedIA workflow with DL equipped from data acquisition to model prediction and analysis. Furthermore, we include benchmark datasets and applications used to evaluate these approaches and analyze the strengths and weaknesses of various methods, unveiling future research opportunities

    MACHINE LEARNING APPROACHES FOR BIOMARKER IDENTIFICATION AND SUBGROUP DISCOVERY FOR POST-TRAUMATIC STRESS DISORDER

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    Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is a psychiatric disorder caused by environmental and genetic factors resulting from alterations in genetic variation, epigenetic changes and neuroimaging characteristics. There is a pressing need to identify reliable molecular and physiological biomarkers for accurate diagnosis, prognosis, and treatment, as well to deepen the understanding of PTSD pathophysiology. Machine learning methods are widely used to infer patterns from biological data, identify biomarkers, and make predictions. The objective of this research is to apply machine learning methods for the accurate classification of human diseases from genome-scale datasets, focusing primarily on PTSD.The DoD-funded Systems Biology of PTSD Consortium has recruited combat veterans with and without PTSD for measurement of molecular and physiological data from blood or urine samples with the goal of identifying accurate and specific PTSD biomarkers. As a member of the Consortium with access to these PTSD multiple omics datasets, we first completed a project titled Clinical Subgroup-Specific PTSD Classification and Biomarker Discovery. We applied machine learning approaches to these data to build classification models consisting of molecular and clinical features to predict PTSD status. We also identified candidate biomarkers for diagnosis, which improves our understanding of PTSD pathogenesis. In a second project, entitled Multi-Omic PTSD Subgroup Identification and Clinical Characterization, we applied methods for integrating multiple omics datasets to investigate the complex, multivariate nature of the biological systems underlying PTSD. We identified an optimal 2 PTSD subgroups using two different machine learning approaches from 82 PTSD positive samples, and we found that the subgroups exhibited different remitting behavior as inferred from subjects recalled at a later time point. The results from our association, differential expression, and classification analyses demonstrated the distinct clinical and molecular features characterizing these subgroups.Taken together, our work has advanced our understanding of PTSD biomarkers and subgroups through the use of machine learning approaches. Results from our work should strongly contribute to the precise diagnosis and eventual treatment of PTSD, as well as other diseases. Future work will involve continuing to leverage these results to enable precision medicine for PTSD

    Doctor of Philosophy

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    dissertationFunctional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) measures the change of oxygen consumption level in the blood vessels of the human brain, hence indirectly detecting the neuronal activity. Resting-state fMRI (rs-fMRI) is used to identify the intrinsic functional patterns of the brain when there is no external stimulus. Accurate estimation of intrinsic activity is important for understanding the functional organization and dynamics of the brain, as well as differences in the functional networks of patients with mental disorders. This dissertation aims to robustly estimate the functional connectivities and networks of the human brain using rs-fMRI data of multiple subjects. We use Markov random field (MRF), an undirected graphical model to represent the statistical dependency among the functional network variables. Graphical models describe multivariate probability distributions that can be factorized and represented by a graph. By defining the nodes and the edges along with their weights according to our assumptions, we build soft constraints into the graph structure as prior information. We explore various approximate optimization methods including variational Bayesian, graph cuts, and Markov chain Monte Carlo sampling (MCMC). We develop the random field models to solve three related problems. In the first problem, the goal is to detect the pairwise connectivity between gray matter voxels in a rs-fMRI dataset of the single subject. We define a six-dimensional graph to represent our prior information that two voxels are more likely to be connected if their spatial neighbors are connected. The posterior mean of the connectivity variables are estimated by variational inference, also known as mean field theory in statistical physics. The proposed method proves to outperform the standard spatial smoothing and is able to detect finer patterns of brain activity. Our second work aims to identify multiple functional systems. We define a Potts model, a special case of MRF, on the network label variables, and define von Mises-Fisher distribution on the normalized fMRI signal. The inference is significantly more difficult than the binary classification in the previous problem. We use MCMC to draw samples from the posterior distribution of network labels. In the third application, we extend the graphical model to the multiple subject scenario. By building a graph including the network labels of both a group map and the subject label maps, we define a hierarchical model that has richer structure than the flat single-subject model, and captures the shared patterns as well as the variation among the subjects. All three solutions are data-driven Bayesian methods, which estimate model parameters from the data. The experiments show that by the regularization of MRF, the functional network maps we estimate are more accurate and more consistent across multiple sessions

    Untangling hotel industry’s inefficiency: An SFA approach applied to a renowned Portuguese hotel chain

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    The present paper explores the technical efficiency of four hotels from Teixeira Duarte Group - a renowned Portuguese hotel chain. An efficiency ranking is established from these four hotel units located in Portugal using Stochastic Frontier Analysis. This methodology allows to discriminate between measurement error and systematic inefficiencies in the estimation process enabling to investigate the main inefficiency causes. Several suggestions concerning efficiency improvement are undertaken for each hotel studied.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio

    Applications of Artificial Intelligence in Medicine Practice

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    This book focuses on a variety of interdisciplinary perspectives concerning the theory and application of artificial intelligence (AI) in medicine, medically oriented human biology, and healthcare. The list of topics includes the application of AI in biomedicine and clinical medicine, machine learning-based decision support, robotic surgery, data analytics and mining, laboratory information systems, and usage of AI in medical education. Special attention is given to the practical aspect of a study. Hence, the inclusion of a clinical assessment of the usefulness and potential impact of the submitted work is strongly highlighted

    Recent publications from the Alzheimer's Disease Neuroimaging Initiative: Reviewing progress toward improved AD clinical trials

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    INTRODUCTION: The Alzheimer's Disease Neuroimaging Initiative (ADNI) has continued development and standardization of methodologies for biomarkers and has provided an increased depth and breadth of data available to qualified researchers. This review summarizes the over 400 publications using ADNI data during 2014 and 2015. METHODS: We used standard searches to find publications using ADNI data. RESULTS: (1) Structural and functional changes, including subtle changes to hippocampal shape and texture, atrophy in areas outside of hippocampus, and disruption to functional networks, are detectable in presymptomatic subjects before hippocampal atrophy; (2) In subjects with abnormal β-amyloid deposition (Aβ+), biomarkers become abnormal in the order predicted by the amyloid cascade hypothesis; (3) Cognitive decline is more closely linked to tau than Aβ deposition; (4) Cerebrovascular risk factors may interact with Aβ to increase white-matter (WM) abnormalities which may accelerate Alzheimer's disease (AD) progression in conjunction with tau abnormalities; (5) Different patterns of atrophy are associated with impairment of memory and executive function and may underlie psychiatric symptoms; (6) Structural, functional, and metabolic network connectivities are disrupted as AD progresses. Models of prion-like spreading of Aβ pathology along WM tracts predict known patterns of cortical Aβ deposition and declines in glucose metabolism; (7) New AD risk and protective gene loci have been identified using biologically informed approaches; (8) Cognitively normal and mild cognitive impairment (MCI) subjects are heterogeneous and include groups typified not only by "classic" AD pathology but also by normal biomarkers, accelerated decline, and suspected non-Alzheimer's pathology; (9) Selection of subjects at risk of imminent decline on the basis of one or more pathologies improves the power of clinical trials; (10) Sensitivity of cognitive outcome measures to early changes in cognition has been improved and surrogate outcome measures using longitudinal structural magnetic resonance imaging may further reduce clinical trial cost and duration; (11) Advances in machine learning techniques such as neural networks have improved diagnostic and prognostic accuracy especially in challenges involving MCI subjects; and (12) Network connectivity measures and genetic variants show promise in multimodal classification and some classifiers using single modalities are rivaling multimodal classifiers. DISCUSSION: Taken together, these studies fundamentally deepen our understanding of AD progression and its underlying genetic basis, which in turn informs and improves clinical trial desig

    Deep Learning-Based Machinery Fault Diagnostics

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    This book offers a compilation for experts, scholars, and researchers to present the most recent advancements, from theoretical methods to the applications of sophisticated fault diagnosis techniques. The deep learning methods for analyzing and testing complex mechanical systems are of particular interest. Special attention is given to the representation and analysis of system information, operating condition monitoring, the establishment of technical standards, and scientific support of machinery fault diagnosis
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