3,880 research outputs found
SETTING PRIORITIES IN FOODBORNE PATHOGEN DATA: PUBLIC AND PRIVATE RESPONSE
Foodborne pathogens, foodborne illness, cost of illness, databases, Food Consumption/Nutrition/Food Safety,
On Lightweight Privacy-Preserving Collaborative Learning for IoT Objects
The Internet of Things (IoT) will be a main data generation infrastructure
for achieving better system intelligence. This paper considers the design and
implementation of a practical privacy-preserving collaborative learning scheme,
in which a curious learning coordinator trains a better machine learning model
based on the data samples contributed by a number of IoT objects, while the
confidentiality of the raw forms of the training data is protected against the
coordinator. Existing distributed machine learning and data encryption
approaches incur significant computation and communication overhead, rendering
them ill-suited for resource-constrained IoT objects. We study an approach that
applies independent Gaussian random projection at each IoT object to obfuscate
data and trains a deep neural network at the coordinator based on the projected
data from the IoT objects. This approach introduces light computation overhead
to the IoT objects and moves most workload to the coordinator that can have
sufficient computing resources. Although the independent projections performed
by the IoT objects address the potential collusion between the curious
coordinator and some compromised IoT objects, they significantly increase the
complexity of the projected data. In this paper, we leverage the superior
learning capability of deep learning in capturing sophisticated patterns to
maintain good learning performance. Extensive comparative evaluation shows that
this approach outperforms other lightweight approaches that apply additive
noisification for differential privacy and/or support vector machines for
learning in the applications with light data pattern complexities.Comment: 12 pages,IOTDI 201
Recovery and serious mental illness: a review of current clinical and research paradigms and future directions
Introduction: Recovery from serious mental illness has historically not been considered a likely or even possible outcome. However, a range of evidence suggests the courses of SMI are heterogeneous with recovery being the most likely outcome. One barrier to studying recovery in SMI is that recovery has been operationalized in divergent and seemingly incompatible ways, as an objective outcome, versus a subjective process.
Areas Covered: This paper offers a review of recovery as a subjective process and recovery as an objective outcome; contrasts methodologies utilized by each approach to assess recovery; reports rates and correlates of recovery; and explores the relationship between objective and subjective forms of recovery.
Expert Commentary: There are two commonalities of approaching recovery as a subjective process and an objective outcome: (i) the need to make meaning out of one’s experiences to engage in either type of recovery and (ii) there exist many threats to engaging in meaning making that may impact the likelihood of moving toward recovery. We offer four clinical implications that stem from these two commonalities within a divided approach to the concept of recovery from SMI
Polyhedral vesicles
Polyhedral vesicles with a large bending modulus of the membrane such as the
gel phase lipid membrane were studied using a Brownian dynamics simulation. The
vesicles exhibit various polyhedral morphologies such as tetrahedron and cube
shapes. We clarified two types of line defects on the edges of the polyhedrons:
cracks of both monolayers at the spontaneous curvature of monolayer , and a crack of the inner monolayer at . Around the
latter defect, the inner monolayer curves positively. Our results suggested
that the polyhedral morphology is controlled by .Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
Energetics of the primary electron transfer reaction revealed by ultrafast spectroscopy on modified bacterial reaction centers
The modification of reaction centers from Rhodobacter sphaeroides by the introduction of pheophytins instead of bacteriopheophytins leads to interesting changes in the primary photosynthetic reaction: long-living populations of the excited electronic state of the special pair P* and the bacteriochlorophyll anion B−A show up. The data allow the determination of the energetics in the reaction center. The free energy of the first intermediate P+B−A, where the electron has reached the accessory bacteriochlorophyll BA lies ≈ 450 cm−1 below the initially excited special pair P*
Explanation matters:An experimental study on explainable AI
Explainable artificial intelligence (XAI) is an important advance in the field of machine learning to shed light on black box algorithms and thus a promising approach to improving artificial intelligence (AI) adoption. While previous literature has already addressed the technological benefits of XAI, there has been little research on XAI from the user’s perspective. Building upon the theory of trust, we propose a model that hypothesizes that post hoc explainability (using Shapley Additive Explanations) has a significant impact on use-related variables in this context. To test our model, we designed an experiment using a randomized controlled trial design where participants compare signatures and detect forged signatures. Surprisingly, our study shows that XAI only has a small but significant impact on perceived explainability. Nevertheless, we demonstrate that a high level of perceived explainability has a strong impact on important constructs including trust and perceived usefulness. A post hoc analysis shows that hedonic factors are significantly related to perceived explainability and require more attention in future research. We conclude with important directions for academia and for organizations.</p
Consumer attitudes towards organic versus conventional food with specific quality attributes
This paper describes the findings from a consumer survey conducted as part of the EU-funded research project QualityLowInputFood (QLIF). The objective was to segment occasional organic consumers with regard to their preferences for organic, conventional and conventional-plus products, i.e., conventional products with a specific attribute that also applies to organic products. In other words, these conventional-plus products are placed between organic and conventional food products. In addition, we aimed at analysing differences between consumer segments regarding their price sensitivity and attitudes towards food. The survey used choice experiments to investigate occasional organic consumer preferences for the different types of products. In subsequent standardized face-to-face interviews we collected data on consumer attitudes towards food that could explain the observed preferences. The attitudes were summarized in attitude factors, using factor analysis. The responses from the interviews and choice experiments were analysed by latent class models. These econometric models were used to identify segments within a group of individuals for their preference structure and to relate membership in each segment to consumer characteristics. Two segments of occasional organic consumers were identified. Consumers in segment 1 strongly preferred organic products and were less price sensitive. Furthermore, consumers in this segment showed a significantly higher level of agreement with most of the investigated attitude factors than consumers in segment 2. The latter consisted of consumers who were significantly more price sensitive and preferred conventional-plus and conventional products rather than organic products. Communicating quality attributes represents a promising marketing tool of product differentiation and information for both organic and conventional food marketers. The price sensitivity of parts of occasional organic consumers suggests that the perceived price-performance ratio of organic products needs to be increased by targeted pricing and communication strategies integrating product-relevant information. If not, conventional-plus products, representing a cheaper alternative, might be preferred by parts of the occasional organic consumers
- …