67 research outputs found
The prevailing dermoscopic vascular pattern in melanoma is influenced by tumor thickness and pigmentation type.
In non-pigmented skin tumors the diagnosis is mainly based on the evaluation of the vascular morphology and vessels\ub4 distribution dermoscopically [1-4]. However, up to date, no study formally correlated the prevailing vascular morphology with the thickness of melanoma according to Breslow and amount of pigmentation
OmniLabel: A Challenging Benchmark for Language-Based Object Detection
Language-based object detection is a promising direction towards building a
natural interface to describe objects in images that goes far beyond plain
category names. While recent methods show great progress in that direction,
proper evaluation is lacking. With OmniLabel, we propose a novel task
definition, dataset, and evaluation metric. The task subsumes standard- and
open-vocabulary detection as well as referring expressions. With more than 28K
unique object descriptions on over 25K images, OmniLabel provides a challenging
benchmark with diverse and complex object descriptions in a naturally
open-vocabulary setting. Moreover, a key differentiation to existing benchmarks
is that our object descriptions can refer to one, multiple or even no object,
hence, providing negative examples in free-form text. The proposed evaluation
handles the large label space and judges performance via a modified average
precision metric, which we validate by evaluating strong language-based
baselines. OmniLabel indeed provides a challenging test bed for future research
on language-based detection.Comment: ICCV 2023 Oral - Visit our project website at
https://www.omnilabel.or
Exploiting Unlabeled Data with Vision and Language Models for Object Detection
Building robust and generic object detection frameworks requires scaling to
larger label spaces and bigger training datasets. However, it is prohibitively
costly to acquire annotations for thousands of categories at a large scale. We
propose a novel method that leverages the rich semantics available in recent
vision and language models to localize and classify objects in unlabeled
images, effectively generating pseudo labels for object detection. Starting
with a generic and class-agnostic region proposal mechanism, we use vision and
language models to categorize each region of an image into any object category
that is required for downstream tasks. We demonstrate the value of the
generated pseudo labels in two specific tasks, open-vocabulary detection, where
a model needs to generalize to unseen object categories, and semi-supervised
object detection, where additional unlabeled images can be used to improve the
model. Our empirical evaluation shows the effectiveness of the pseudo labels in
both tasks, where we outperform competitive baselines and achieve a novel
state-of-the-art for open-vocabulary object detection. Our code is available at
https://github.com/xiaofeng94/VL-PLM.Comment: Accepted to ECCV 2022 (with the supplementary document
Improving Pseudo Labels for Open-Vocabulary Object Detection
Recent studies show promising performance in open-vocabulary object detection
(OVD) using pseudo labels (PLs) from pretrained vision and language models
(VLMs). However, PLs generated by VLMs are extremely noisy due to the gap
between the pretraining objective of VLMs and OVD, which blocks further
advances on PLs. In this paper, we aim to reduce the noise in PLs and propose a
method called online Self-training And a Split-and-fusion head for OVD
(SAS-Det). First, the self-training finetunes VLMs to generate high quality PLs
while prevents forgetting the knowledge learned in the pretraining. Second, a
split-and-fusion (SAF) head is designed to remove the noise in localization of
PLs, which is usually ignored in existing methods. It also fuses complementary
knowledge learned from both precise ground truth and noisy pseudo labels to
boost the performance. Extensive experiments demonstrate SAS-Det is both
efficient and effective. Our pseudo labeling is 3 times faster than prior
methods. SAS-Det outperforms prior state-of-the-art models of the same scale by
a clear margin and achieves 37.4 AP and 27.3 AP on novel categories
of the COCO and LVIS benchmarks, respectively.Comment: 20 pages, 8 figure
Algorithmic Complexity for Short Binary Strings Applied to Psychology: A Primer
Since human randomness production has been studied and widely used to assess
executive functions (especially inhibition), many measures have been suggested
to assess the degree to which a sequence is random-like. However, each of them
focuses on one feature of randomness, leading authors to have to use multiple
measures. Here we describe and advocate for the use of the accepted universal
measure for randomness based on algorithmic complexity, by means of a novel
previously presented technique using the the definition of algorithmic
probability. A re-analysis of the classical Radio Zenith data in the light of
the proposed measure and methodology is provided as a study case of an
application.Comment: To appear in Behavior Research Method
Observation of and search for violation in radiative charm decays
We report the first observation of the radiative charm decay and the first search for violation in decays , , and , using a data sample of
943 fb collected with the Belle detector at the KEKB asymmetric-energy
collider. The branching fraction is measured to be , where the first
uncertainty is statistical and the second is systematic. The obtained
asymmetries, , , and
, are consistent with no violation. We also present an improved
measurement of the branching fractions and
MCM2 - a promising marker for premalignant lesions of the lung: a cohort study
BACKGROUND: Because cells progressing to cancer must proliferate, marker proteins specific to proliferating cells may permit detection of premalignant lesions. Here we compared the sensitivities of a classic proliferation marker, Ki-67, with a new proliferation marker, MCM2, in 41 bronchial biopsy specimens representing normal mucosa, metaplasia, dysplasia, and carcinoma in situ. METHODS: Parallel sections were stained with antibodies against MCM2 and Ki-67, and the frequencies of staining were independently measured by two investigators. Differences were evaluated statistically using the two-sided correlated samples t-test and Wilcoxon rank sum test. RESULTS: For each of the 41 specimens, the average frequency of staining by anti-MCM2 (39%) was significantly (p < 0.001) greater than by anti-Ki-67 (16%). In metaplastic lesions anti-MCM2 frequently detected cells near the epithelial surface, while anti-Ki-67 did not. CONCLUSIONS: We conclude that MCM2 is detectable in 2-3 times more proliferating premalignant lung cells than is Ki-67. The promise of MCM2 as a sensitive marker for premalignant lung cells is enhanced by the fact that it is present in cells at the surface of metaplastic lung lesions, which are more likely to be exfoliated into sputum. Future studies will determine if use of anti-MCM2 makes possible sufficiently early detection to significantly enhance lung cancer survival rates
A Novel Peptide Derived from Human Apolipoprotein E Is an Inhibitor of Tumor Growth and Ocular Angiogenesis
Angiogenesis is a hallmark of tumor development and metastasis and now a validated target for cancer treatment. We previously reported that a novel dimer peptide (apoEdp) derived from the receptor binding region of human apolipoprotein E (apoE) inhibits virus-induced angiogenesis. However, its role in tumor anti-angiogenesis is unknown. This study demonstrates that apoEdp has anti-angiogenic property in vivo through reduction of tumor growth in a mouse model and ocular angiogenesis in a rabbit eye model. Our in vitro studies show that apoEdp inhibits human umbilical vein endothelial cell proliferation, migration, invasion and capillary tube formation. We document that apoEdp inhibits vascular endothelial growth factor-induced Flk-1 activation as well as downstream signaling pathways that involve c-Src, Akt, eNOS, FAK, and ERK1/2. These in vitro data suggest potential sites of the apoE dipeptide inhibition that could occur in vivo
Global epidemiology of drug resistance after failure of WHO recommended first-line regimens for adult HIV-1 infection: A multicentre retrospective cohort study
Background Antiretroviral therapy (ART) is crucial for controlling HIV-1 infection through wide-scale treatment as prevention and pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP). Potent tenofovir disoproxil fumarate-containing regimens are increasingly used to treat and prevent HIV, although few data exist for frequency and risk factors of acquired drug resistance in regions hardest hit by the HIV pandemic. We aimed to do a global assessment of drug resistance after virological failure with first-line tenofovir-containing ART.Methods The TenoRes collaboration comprises adult HIV treatment cohorts and clinical trials of HIV drug resistance testing in Europe, Latin and North America, sub-Saharan Africa, and Asia. We extracted and harmonised data for patients undergoing genotypic resistance testing after virological failure with a first-line regimen containing tenofovir plus a cytosine analogue (lamivudine or emtricitabine) plus a non-nucleotide reverse-transcriptase inhibitor (NNRTI; efavirenz or nevirapine). We used an individual participant-level meta-analysis and multiple logistic regression to identify covariates associated with drug resistance. Our primary outcome was tenofovir resistance, defined as presence of K65R/N or K70E/G/Q mutations in the reverse transcriptase (RT) gene.Findings We included 1926 patients from 36 countries with treatment failure between 1998 and 2015. Prevalence of tenofovir resistance was highest in sub-Saharan Africa (370/654 [57%]). Pre-ART CD4 cell count was the covariate most strongly associated with the development of tenofovir resistance (odds ratio [OR] 1.50, 95% CI 1.27-1.77 for CD4 cell count <100 cells per mu L). Use of lamivudine versus emtricitabine increased the risk of tenofovir resistance across regions (OR 1.48, 95% CI 1.20-1.82). Of 700 individuals with tenofovir resistance, 578 (83%) had cytosine analogue resistance (M184V/I mutation), 543 (78%) had major NNRTI resistance, and 457 (65%) had both. The mean plasma viral load at virological failure was similar in individuals with and without tenofovir resistance (145 700 copies per mL [SE 12 480] versus 133 900 copies per mL [SE 16 650; p=0.626]).Interpretation We recorded drug resistance in a high proportion of patients after virological failure on a tenofovir-containing first-line regimen across low-income and middle-income regions. Effective surveillance for transmission of drug resistance is crucial. Copyright (C) The TenoRes Study Group. Open Access article distributed under the terms of CC BY
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