48 research outputs found

    Image Steganography using Hybrid Edge Detector and Ridgelet Transform

    Get PDF
    Steganography is the art of hiding high sensitive information in digital image, text, video, and audio. In this paper, authors have proposed a frequency domain steganography method operating in the Ridgelet transform. Authors engage the advantage of ridgelet transform, which represents the digital image with straight edges. In the embedding phase, the proposed hybrid edge detector acts as a preprocessing step to obtain the edge image from the cover image, then the edge image is partitioned into several blocks to operate with straight edges and Ridgelet transform is applied to each block. Then, the most significant gradient vectors (or significant edges) are selected to embed the secret data. The proposed method has shown the advantages of imperceptibility of the stego image is increased because the secret data is hidden in the significant gradient vector. Authors employed the hybrid edge detector to obtain the edge image, which increases the embedding capacity. Experimental results demonstrates that peak signal-to-noise (PSNR) ratio of stego image generated by this method versus the cover image is guaranteed to be above 49 dB. PSNR is much higher than that of all data hiding techniques reported in the literature.Defence Science Journal, Vol. 65, No. 3, May 2015, pp.214-219, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.14429/dsj.65.787

    Training feedforward neural network using genetic algorithm to diagnose left ventricular hypertrophy

    Get PDF
    In this research work, a new technique was proposed for the diagnosis of left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) from the ECG signal. The advanced imaging techniques can be used to diagnose left ventricular hypertrophy, but it leads to time-consuming and more expensive. This proposed technique overcomes thesef issues and may serve as an efficient tool to diagnose the LVH disease. The LVH causes changes in the patterns of ECG signal which includes R wave, QRS and T wave. This proposed approach identifies the changes in the pattern and extracts the temporal, spatial and statistical features of the ECG signal using windowed filtering technique. These features were applied to the conventional classifier and also to the neural network classifier with the modified weights using a genetic algorithm. The weights were modified by combining the crossover operators such as crossover arithmetic and crossover two-point operator. The results were compared with the various classifiers and the performance of the neural network with the modified weights using a genetic algorithm is outperformed. The accuracy of the weights modified feedforward neural network is 97.5%

    Iris Image Recognition using Optimized Kohonen Self Organizing Neural Network

    Get PDF
    The pursuit to develop an effective people management system has widened over the years to manage the enormous increase in population. Any management system includes identification, verification and recognition stages. Iris recognition has become notable biometrics to support the management system due to its versatility and non-invasive approach. These systems help to identify the individual with the texture information distributed around the iris region. Many classification algorithms are available to help in iris recognition. But those are very sophisticated and require heavy computation. In this paper, an improved Kohonen self-organizing neural network (KSONN) is used to boost the performance of existing KSONN. This improvement is brought by the introduction of optimization technique into the learning phase of the KSONN. The proposed method shows improved accuracy of the recognition. Moreover, it also reduces the iterations required to train the network. From the experimental results, it is observed that the proposed method achieves a maximum accuracy of 98% in 85 iterations

    A systematic review on machine learning models for online learning and examination systems

    Get PDF
    Examinations or assessments play a vital role in every student’s life; they determine their future and career paths. The COVID pandemic has left adverse impacts in all areas, including the academic field. The regularized classroom learning and face-to-face real-time examinations were not feasible to avoid widespread infection and ensure safety. During these desperate times, technological advancements stepped in to aid students in continuing their education without any academic breaks. Machine learning is a key to this digital transformation of schools or colleges from real-time to online mode. Online learning and examination during lockdown were made possible by Machine learning methods. In this article, a systematic review of the role of Machine learning in Lockdown Exam Management Systems was conducted by evaluating 135 studies over the last five years. The significance of Machine learning in the entire exam cycle from pre-exam preparation, conduction of examination, and evaluation were studied and discussed. The unsupervised or supervised Machine learning algorithms were identified and categorized in each process. The primary aspects of examinations, such as authentication, scheduling, proctoring, and cheat or fraud detection, are investigated in detail with Machine learning perspectives. The main attributes, such as prediction of at-risk students, adaptive learning, and monitoring of students, are integrated for more understanding of the role of machine learning in exam preparation, followed by its management of the post-examination process. Finally, this review concludes with issues and challenges that machine learning imposes on the examination system, and these issues are discussed with solutions

    Arabic spam tweets classification using deep learning

    Get PDF
    With the increased use of social network sites, such as Twitter, attackers exploit these platforms to spread counterfeit content. Such content can be fake advertisements or illegal content. Classifying such content is a challenging task, especially in Arabic. The Arabic language has a complex structure and makes classification tasks more difficult. This paper presents an approach to classifying Arabic tweets using classical machine learning (non-deep machine learning) and deep learning techniques. Tweets corpus were collected through Twitter API and labelled manually to get a reliable dataset. For an efficient classifier, feature extraction is applied to the corpus dataset. Then, two learning techniques are used for each feature extraction technique on the created dataset using N-gram models (uni-gram, bi-gram, and char-gram). The applied classical machine learning algorithms are support vector machines, neural networks, logistics regression, and naïve Bayes. Global vector (GloVe) and fastText learning models are utilised for the deep learning approaches. The Precision, Recall, and F1-score are the suggested performance measures calculated in this paper. Afterwards, the dataset is increased using the synthetic minority oversampling technique class to create a balanced dataset. After applying the classical machine learning models, the experimental results show that the neural network algorithm outperforms the other algorithms. Moreover, the GloVe outperforms the fastText model for the deep learning approach

    Automatic detection of white blood cancer from bone marrow microscopic images using convolutional neural networks

    Get PDF
    Leukocytes, produced in the bone marrow, make up around one percent of all blood cells. Uncontrolled growth of these white blood cells leads to the birth of blood cancer. Out of the three different types of cancers, the proposed study provides a robust mechanism for the classification of Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia (ALL) and Multiple Myeloma (MM) using the SN-AM dataset. Acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) is a type of cancer where the bone marrow forms too many lymphocytes. On the other hand, Multiple myeloma (MM), a different kind of cancer, causes cancer cells to accumulate in the bone marrow rather than releasing them into the bloodstream. Therefore, they crowd out and prevent the production of healthy blood cells. Conventionally, the process was carried out manually by a skilled professional in a considerable amount of time. The proposed model eradicates the probability of errors in the manual process by employing deep learning techniques, namely convolutional neural networks. The model, trained on cells' images, first pre-processes the images and extracts the best features. This is followed by training the model with the optimized Dense Convolutional neural network framework (termed DCNN here) and finally predicting the type of cancer present in the cells. The model was able to reproduce all the measurements correctly while it recollected the samples exactly 94 times out of 100. The overall accuracy was recorded to be 97.2%, which is better than the conventional machine learning methods like Support Vector Machine (SVMs), Decision Trees, Random Forests, Naive Bayes, etc. This study indicates that the DCNN model's performance is close to that of the established CNN architectures with far fewer parameters and computation time tested on the retrieved dataset. Thus, the model can be used effectively as a tool for determining the type of cancer in the bone marrow. © 2013 IEEE

    Human behaviour analysis using intelligent systems

    No full text
    corecore