33 research outputs found
Leveraging internet-98 technology for computer healthcare networks: to its limits and its limitations
To what extent can current Internet technology be leveraged to fulfill the vision of the electronic
patient record (EPR) as a multimedia object and the healthcare information system as a secure
distributed computing network? We explore provision of reliable, secure, intuitive, and
inexpensive medical Intranets through simple scripting and configuration â avoiding the need for
large programming teams. By prototyping the EPR as a secure newsgroup we demonstrate the
feasibility of a basic workflow system that: preserves a signed-paper style visibility of patient
data at all times; enriches presentation with multimedia online image exam viewing and user
controlled animation; whilst protecting confidential patient data via encrypted data
transmission, digital signatures, and authenticated user-access control. In the process several
limitation of this technology are uncovered
Sustaining the paper metaphor with dynamic HTML
We describe prototypes that sustain the paper metaphor in two new on-line scenarios:
(1) reading annotated works of foreign literature, and (2) paperless medical reporting
[Brelstaff & Chessa, âD-HTML paper metaphorsâ, submitted to Demoâs at HCIâ98]
A distributed heterogeneous image server
Digital image transmission is now ubiquitous across computer networks and thus there
is increasing pressure to allow access to medical image data at sites remote from PACS
locations. In fact, it may soon make economic sense to outsource medical image
services - to dedicated service providers at geographical locations outside of the
traditional radiology department or HISâs. The technical challenge faced by system
developers is to produce client-Viewer/server-PACS configurations that can
realistically span the network. In particular, the systems must provide the performance
usually expected by client medics and it must be flexible to the needs of the service
providers.
At CRS4 - BioMedical Applications - we are integrating various technologies derived
from the www-intranet field, and object-oriented middleware to prototype
technological solutions that address both the issues of performance and flexibility.
These are discussed in turn below; then we provide an overview of our system
Going Beyond Google Translate?
Ciclo 2012 di seminari interni CRS4, Number 20120229.We motivate and describe the design and implementation of a web-based system for the alignment of parallel texts. It builds on the interactive color-highlight interface now deployed at Google Translate. By a series of simple point and click operations translators can mark up equivalent text-ranges in their own translation and in the original. When successful, the visual cues created by this activity should benefit the understanding of readers of limited degrees of bilingualism -- and may also capture aspects of semantic context not readily available to algorithmic statistical machine translation. We provide a working demonstration that treats poetic texts.Statistical machine translation (SMT) delivers texts unacceptable for literary or academic purposes since generally, it cannot assimilate adequate context: Yet how might one ever articulate such context? Here rather than taking a theoretical perspective we adopt an spatio-visual approach made possible by recent advances in the electronic presentation of multilingual texts:â we allow the translator supply the colour higlights... But how? Semantic units don't respect lexical boundaries and they occur at different scales. Any translator, committed to provide a definitive version of a text, eventually arrives at irreversible order of words â and may actually wish to justify their choices by documenting the correspondence between their version and the original. We focus on verse â an extreme challenge for SMT â with the eventual aim of expressing elusive aspects of semantic communication in order to differentiate those that can be articulated via spatio-visual cues. In verse a deviation from a literal correspondence is essential to reestablish in the translation a "decorum" appropriate to the original so that readers are encouraged to achieve an equivalent respect for its author also from the translated works. We use jQuery to provide an interface that lets the human translator mark up what they consider a correct alignment between words, or groups of words, in the original and their own translation â with a view to articulating context that may not be readily available to SMT. We detail below how the interface runs off a web-page and allows the alignment of equivalent ranges in parallel texts via a simple point-and-click action. Alignments created by the user are instantaneously made visible using a variant of the interactive color-highlight system mentioned above. Key to reducing the complexity of the implementation of the interface is our systematic deployment of open-standard, non-proprietary, web technologies.2011-09-15AlgheroCHItaly2011, 13-16 settembre 2011, Algher
Bag of Peaks
Abstract
Motivation: The analysis of high-resolution proton nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectrometry can assist human experts to implicate metabolites expressed by diseased biofluids. Here, we explore an intermediate representation, between spectral trace and classifier, able to furnish a communicative interface between expert and machine. This representation permits equivalent, or better, classification accuracies than either principal component analysis (PCA) or multi-dimensional scaling (MDS). In the training phase, the peaks in each trace are detected and clustered in order to compile a common dictionary, which could be visualized and adjusted by an expert. The dictionary is used to characterize each trace with a fixed-length feature vector, termed Bag of Peaks, ready to be classified with classical supervised methods.
Results: Our small-scale study, concerning Type I diabetes in Sardinian children, provides a preliminary indication of the effectiveness of the Bag of Peaks approach over standard PCA and MDS. Consistently, higher classification accuracies are obtained once a sufficient number of peaks (>10) are included in the dictionary. A large-scale simulation of noisy spectra further confirms this advantage. Finally, suggestions for metabolite-peak loci that may be implicated in the disease are obtained by applying standard feature selection techniques.
Availability: Matlab code to compute the Bag of Peaks representation may be found at http://economia.uniss.it/docenti/bicego/BagOfPeaks/BagOfPeaks.zip
Contact: [email protected]
Comparing faces: a computational and perceptual study
The problem of extracting distinctive parts from a face is addressed. Rather than examining a priori specified
features such as nose, eyes, month or others, the aim here is to extract from a face the most distinguishing or
dissimilar parts with respect to another given face, i.e. finding differences between faces. A computational
approach, based on log polar patch sampling and evaluation, has been compared with results obtained from a
newly designed perceptual test involving 45 people. The results of the comparison confirm the potential of the
proposed computational method
Pseudo-holographic device elicits rapid depth cues despite random-dot surface masking
Experiments with random-dot masking demonstrate that, in the absence of cues mundanely available to 2-D displays (object occlusion, surface shading, perspective foreshortening, and texture gradients), Holografika's large-screen multi-projector video system (COHERENT-IST-FP6-510166) elicits useful stereoscopic and motion-parallax depth cues, and does so in under 2 s. We employed a simplified version of Julesz's (c. 1971) famous spiral ramp surface: a 3-layer cylindrical wedding-cake--via an openGL model that subjects viewed along its concentric axis. By adjusting its parameters, two sets of model-stimuli were rendered: one with a uniform large field of depth and one where the field was effectively flat. Each of eleven, pre-screened, subjects completed four experiments, each consisting of eight trials in a 2IFC design whereby they indicated in which interval they perceived the greatest field of depth. The experiments tested one-eye static, one-eye head-swaying, two-eye static, and two-eye head-swaying observation--in that order. Scores improved also in that order
Towards a psychophysical evaluation of a surgical simulator for bone-burring
The CRS4 experimental bone-burr simulator implements visual and haptic effects through the incorporation of a physics-based contact model and patient-specific data. Psychophysical tests demonstrate that, despite its simplified model and its inherent technological constraints, the simulator can articulate material differences, and that its users can learn to associate virtual bone with real bone material. Tests addressed both surface probing and interior drilling task. We also explore a haptic contrast sensitivity function based on the model s two main parameters: an elastic constant and an erosion factor. Both parameters manifest power-law-like sensitivity with respective exponents of around two and three. Further tests may reveal how well simulator users perceive fine differences in bone material, like those encountered while drilling through real volume boundaries.139-14
Demonstration: dynamic-HTML paper metaphors
We demonstrate prototypes that sustain the paper metaphor in two new on-line
scenarios: (1) reading annotated works of foreign literature, and (2) paperless medical
reporting. See [Brelstaff & Chessa, âSustaining the paper metaphor with Dynamic-
HTMLâ, submitted as a short paper to HCIâ98] for further detail