469 research outputs found

    Models and analysis of vocal emissions for biomedical applications: 5th International Workshop: December 13-15, 2007, Firenze, Italy

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    The MAVEBA Workshop proceedings, held on a biannual basis, collect the scientific papers presented both as oral and poster contributions, during the conference. The main subjects are: development of theoretical and mechanical models as an aid to the study of main phonatory dysfunctions, as well as the biomedical engineering methods for the analysis of voice signals and images, as a support to clinical diagnosis and classification of vocal pathologies. The Workshop has the sponsorship of: Ente Cassa Risparmio di Firenze, COST Action 2103, Biomedical Signal Processing and Control Journal (Elsevier Eds.), IEEE Biomedical Engineering Soc. Special Issues of International Journals have been, and will be, published, collecting selected papers from the conference

    Hidden Markov Models

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    Hidden Markov Models (HMMs), although known for decades, have made a big career nowadays and are still in state of development. This book presents theoretical issues and a variety of HMMs applications in speech recognition and synthesis, medicine, neurosciences, computational biology, bioinformatics, seismology, environment protection and engineering. I hope that the reader will find this book useful and helpful for their own research

    Models and analysis of vocal emissions for biomedical applications

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    This book of Proceedings collects the papers presented at the 3rd International Workshop on Models and Analysis of Vocal Emissions for Biomedical Applications, MAVEBA 2003, held 10-12 December 2003, Firenze, Italy. The workshop is organised every two years, and aims to stimulate contacts between specialists active in research and industrial developments, in the area of voice analysis for biomedical applications. The scope of the Workshop includes all aspects of voice modelling and analysis, ranging from fundamental research to all kinds of biomedical applications and related established and advanced technologies

    Privacy-Protecting Techniques for Behavioral Data: A Survey

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    Our behavior (the way we talk, walk, or think) is unique and can be used as a biometric trait. It also correlates with sensitive attributes like emotions. Hence, techniques to protect individuals privacy against unwanted inferences are required. To consolidate knowledge in this area, we systematically reviewed applicable anonymization techniques. We taxonomize and compare existing solutions regarding privacy goals, conceptual operation, advantages, and limitations. Our analysis shows that some behavioral traits (e.g., voice) have received much attention, while others (e.g., eye-gaze, brainwaves) are mostly neglected. We also find that the evaluation methodology of behavioral anonymization techniques can be further improved

    Effects of intracranial stimulation and the involvement of the human parahippocampal cortex in perception

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    How the human brain translates photons hitting the retina into conscious perception remains an open question. Throughout the medial temporal lobe (MTL), there are neurons (called concept cells) that change their firing rate when that neuron's preferred concept, e.g., a specific person or object, is seen. The firing rate of concept cells is correlated with perception. Nevertheless, it remains unclear whether or to what extent concept cells are involved in perceptogenesis, i.e., the creation of conscious percepts. Inferring from studies in monkeys, concept-specific neurons involved in perceptogenesis would be expected along the ventral and dorsal stream of visual processing (also called the what and where pathway, respectively). Various regions that are part of the dorsal stream are connected to the parahippocampal cortex (PHC), a region within the MTL. Compared to other MTL regions, lower selectivity, the absence of multimodal responses, and especially the shorter response latencies do not exclude an involvement of the PHC in perceptogenesis. In fact, damage to the parahippocampal place area (PPA, a part of the PHC) results in topographical disorientation. The goal of this thesis is to test the involvement of the PHC in perception by using electrical stimulation during a forced-choice categorization task involving landscapes versus animals. First, we determined effective parameters for intracranial stimulation of brain tissue in epilepsy patients implanted with depth-electrodes for seizure monitoring. We investigated the effects of amplitude, phase width, frequency, and pulse-train duration on neuronal firing, the local field potential (LFP), and behavioral responses to evoked percepts. Frequency and charge per phase were the most influential parameters on all three signals. Both parameters showed a positive effect on event-related potentials (ERPs) in the LFP. Higher frequencies (especially around 200 Hz) lead to a short-term inhibition of neuronal firing, while higher charge per phase can have an inhibitory or excitatory effect on neuronal firing. All parameters had a positive effect on the reports of evoked percepts; on reports of phosphenes in response to stimulating close to the optic radiation as well as on reports of auditory verbal hallucinations in response to stimulating Heschl's gyrus. Using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), we found that the PPA, i.e., the part of the PHC that is most selective towards images of landscapes, is rather small (up to 1‰ of total brain volume per hemisphere) with varying degrees of hemispheric laterality. Stimulating the PHC outside of the PPA - using a 100 ms high-frequency pulse train delivered at the natural response latency of the PHC - had no effect on categorizing landscapes. However, stimulating inside the PPA, close to the peak activation of the fMRI cluster, resulted in a 7% to 10% increase in landscape responses to ambiguous stimuli. Furthermore, stimulating the PPA also led to an increase in behavioral response time, especially to images with a predominant landscape component. None of our patients reported visual hallucinations of places or scenes in response to our stimulation protocols. Our data suggests that the PPA is involved in the perceptogenesis of landscapes at a stage that does not reach awareness, while the rest of the PHC is unlikely to be involved in perceptogenesis, at least not as it pertains to the perception of landscapes or animals. We also developed an online spike sorting algorithm and an adaptive screening procedure for concept cells to pave the way for new paradigms involving informed feedback

    Cervical Auscultation for the Identification of Swallowing Difficulties

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    Swallowing difficulties, commonly referred to as dysphagia, affect thousands of Americans every year. They have a multitude of causes, but in general they are known to increase the risk of aspiration when swallowing in addition to other physiological effects. Cervical auscultation has been recently applied to detect such difficulties non-invasively and various techniques for analysis and processing of the recorded signals have been proposed. We attempted to further this research in three key areas. First, we characterized swallows with regards to a multitude of time, frequency, and time-frequency features while paying special attention to the differences between swallows from healthy adults and safe dysphagic swallows as well as safe and unsafe dysphagic swallows. Second, we attempted to utilize deep belief networks in order to classify these states automatically and without the aid of a concurrent videofluoroscopic examination. Finally, we sought to improve some of the signal processing techniques used in this field. We both implemented the DBSCAN algorithm to better segment our physiological signals as well as applied the matched complex wavelet transform to cervical auscultation data in order to improve its quality for mathematical analysis

    Epilepsy

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    With the vision of including authors from different parts of the world, different educational backgrounds, and offering open-access to their published work, InTech proudly presents the latest edited book in epilepsy research, Epilepsy: Histological, electroencephalographic, and psychological aspects. Here are twelve interesting and inspiring chapters dealing with basic molecular and cellular mechanisms underlying epileptic seizures, electroencephalographic findings, and neuropsychological, psychological, and psychiatric aspects of epileptic seizures, but non-epileptic as well
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