9,348 research outputs found
A System for Accessible Artificial Intelligence
While artificial intelligence (AI) has become widespread, many commercial AI
systems are not yet accessible to individual researchers nor the general public
due to the deep knowledge of the systems required to use them. We believe that
AI has matured to the point where it should be an accessible technology for
everyone. We present an ongoing project whose ultimate goal is to deliver an
open source, user-friendly AI system that is specialized for machine learning
analysis of complex data in the biomedical and health care domains. We discuss
how genetic programming can aid in this endeavor, and highlight specific
examples where genetic programming has automated machine learning analyses in
previous projects.Comment: 14 pages, 5 figures, submitted to Genetic Programming Theory and
Practice 2017 worksho
Accelerating epistasis analysis in human genetics with consumer graphics hardware
BACKGROUND: Human geneticists are now capable of measuring more than one million DNA sequence variations from across the human genome. The new challenge is to develop computationally feasible methods capable of analyzing these data for associations with common human disease, particularly in the context of epistasis. Epistasis describes the situation where multiple genes interact in a complex non-linear manner to determine an individual's disease risk and is thought to be ubiquitous for common diseases. Multifactor Dimensionality Reduction (MDR) is an algorithm capable of detecting epistasis. An exhaustive analysis with MDR is often computationally expensive, particularly for high order interactions. This challenge has previously been met with parallel computation and expensive hardware. The option we examine here exploits commodity hardware designed for computer graphics. In modern computers Graphics Processing Units (GPUs) have more memory bandwidth and computational capability than Central Processing Units (CPUs) and are well suited to this problem. Advances in the video game industry have led to an economy of scale creating a situation where these powerful components are readily available at very low cost. Here we implement and evaluate the performance of the MDR algorithm on GPUs. Of primary interest are the time required for an epistasis analysis and the price to performance ratio of available solutions. FINDINGS: We found that using MDR on GPUs consistently increased performance per machine over both a feature rich Java software package and a C++ cluster implementation. The performance of a GPU workstation running a GPU implementation reduces computation time by a factor of 160 compared to an 8-core workstation running the Java implementation on CPUs. This GPU workstation performs similarly to 150 cores running an optimized C++ implementation on a Beowulf cluster. Furthermore this GPU system provides extremely cost effective performance while leaving the CPU available for other tasks. The GPU workstation containing three GPUs costs 82,500. CONCLUSION: Graphics hardware based computing provides a cost effective means to perform genetic analysis of epistasis using MDR on large datasets without the infrastructure of a computing cluster
Compact High-Velocity Clouds at High Resolution
Six examples of the compact, isolated high-velocity clouds catalogued by
Braun & Burton (1999) and identified with a dynamically cold ensemble of
primitive objects falling towards the barycenter of the Local Group have been
imaged with the Westerbork Synthesis Radio Telescope; an additional ten have
been imaged with the Arecibo telescope. The imaging reveals a characteristic
core/halo morphology: one or several cores of cool, relatively
high-column-density material, are embedded in an extended halo of warmer,
lower-density material. Several of the cores show kinematic gradients
consistent with rotation; these CHVCs are evidently rotationally supported and
dark-matter dominated. The imaging data allows several independent estimates of
the distances to these objects, which lie in the range 0.3 to 1.0 Mpc. The CHVC
properties resemble what might be expected from very dark dwarf irregular
galaxies.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figures, to appear in "The Chemical Evolution of the
Milky Way: Stars versus Clusters", eds. F. Matteuchi and F. Giovannelli,
Kluwer Academic Publisher
Blueswitch: Enabling provably consistent configuration of network switches
Previous research on consistent updates for distributed network
configurations has focused on solutions for centralized networkconfiguration
controllers. However, such work does not address
the complexity of modern switch datapaths. Modern commodity
switches expose opaque configuration mechanisms, with minimal
guarantees for datapath consistency and with unclear configuration
semantics. Furthermore, would-be solutions for distributed consistent
updates must take into account the configuration guarantees
provided by each individual switch – plus the compositional problems
of distributed control and multi-switch configurations that
considerably transcend the single-switch problems. In this paper,
we focus on the behavior of individual switches, and demonstrate
that even simple rule updates result in inconsistent packet switching
in multi-table datapaths. We demonstrate that consistent configuration
updates require guarantees of strong switch-level atomicity
from both hardware and software layers of switches – even in a
single switch. In short, the multiple-switch problems cannot be
reasonably approached until single-switch consistency can be resolved.
We present a hardware design that supports a transactional configuration
mechanism, and provides packet-consistent configuration:
all packets traversing the datapath will encounter either the
old configuration or the new one, and never an inconsistent mix of
the two. Unlike previous work, our design does not require modifications
to network packets. We precisely specify the hardwaresoftware
protocol for switch configuration; this enables us to prove
the correctness of the design, and to provide well-specified invariants
that the software driver must maintain for correctness. We
implement our prototype switch design using the NetFPGA-10G
hardware platform, and evaluate our prototype against commercial
off-the-shelf switches.This work was jointly supported by the Defense Advanced Research
Projects Agency (DARPA) and the Air Force Research Laboratory
(AFRL), under contract FA8750-11-C-0249. The views,
opinions, and/or findings contained in this article/presentation are
those of the author/ presenter and should not be interpreted as representing
the official views or policies, either expressed or implied,
of the Department of Defense or the U.S. Government. We also acknowledge
the support of the UK EPSRC for contributing to parts
of our work, through grant EP/H040536/1. Additional data related
to this publication is available at the http://www.cl.cam.ac.
uk/research/srg/netfpga/blueswitch/ data repository.This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from IEEE via http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/ANCS.2015.711011
Diagnosis, prevention and treatment of hepatorenal syndrome in cirrhosis
Hepatorenal syndrome (HRS) is a serious complication of end-stage liver disease, occurring mainly in patients with advanced cirrhosis and ascites, who have marked circulatory dysfunction,1 as well as in patients with acute liver failure.2 In spite of its functional nature, HRS is associated with a poor prognosis,3 4 and the only effective treatment is liver transplantation. During the 56th Meeting of the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases, the International Ascites Club held a Focused Study Group (FSG) on HRS for the purpose of reporting the results of an international workshop and to reach a consensus on a new definition, criteria for diagnosis and recommendations on HRS treatment. A similar workshop was held in Chicago in 1994 in which standardised nomenclature and diagnostic criteria for refractory ascites and HRS were established.5 The introduction of innovative treatments and improvements in our understanding of the pathogenesis of HRS during the previous decade led to an increasing need to undertake a new consensus meeting. This paper reports the scientific rationale behind the new definitions and recommendations. The international workshop included four issues debated by four panels of experts (see Acknowledgements). The issues were: (1) evidence-based HRS pathogenesis; (2) treatment of HRS using vasoconstrictors; (3) other HRS treatments using transjugular intrahepatic portosystemic stent-shunt (TIPS) and extracorporeal albumin dialysis (ECAD); and (4) new definitions and diagnostic criteria for HRS and recommendations for its treatment
Efficacy of photochemical internalisation using disulfonated chlorin and porphyrin photosensitisers: An in vitro study in 2D and 3D prostate cancer models
This study shows the therapeutic outcome of Photochemical Internalisation (PCI) in prostate cancer in vitro surpasses that of Photodynamic Therapy (PDT) and could improve prostate PDT in the clinic, whilst avoiding chemotherapeutics side effects. In addition, the study assesses the potential of PCI with two different photosensitisers (TPCS2a and TPPS2a) in prostate cancer cells (human PC3 and rat MatLyLu) using standard 2D monolayer culture and 3D biomimetic model. Photosensitisers were used alone for photodynamic therapy (PDT) or with the cytotoxin saporin (PCI). TPPS2a and TPCS2a were shown to be located in discrete cytoplasmic vesicles before light treatment and redistribute into the cytosol upon light excitation. PC3 cells exhibit a higher uptake than MatLyLu cells for both photosensitisers. In the 2D model, PCI resulted in greater cell death than PDT alone in both cell lines. In 3D model, morphological changes were also observed. Saporin-based toxicity was negligible in PC3 cells, but pronounced in MatLyLu cells (IC50 = 18 nM). In conclusion, the study showed that tumour features such as tumour cell growth rate or interaction with drugs determine therapeutic conditions for optimal photochemical treatment in metastatic prostate cancer
N=4 Superconformal Algebra and the Entropy of HyperKahler Manifolds
We study the elliptic genera of hyperKahler manifolds using the
representation theory of N=4 superconformal algebra. We consider the
decomposition of the elliptic genera in terms of N=4 irreducible characters,
and derive the rate of increase of the multiplicities of half-BPS
representations making use of Rademacher expansion. Exponential increase of the
multiplicity suggests that we can associate the notion of an entropy to the
geometry of hyperKahler manifolds. In the case of symmetric products of K3
surfaces our entropy agrees with the black hole entropy of D5-D1 system.Comment: 25 pages, 1 figur
Relative Pitch Perception and the Detection of Deviant Tone Patterns.
Most people are able to recognise familiar tunes even when played in a different key. It is assumed that this depends on a general capacity for relative pitch perception; the ability to recognise the pattern of inter-note intervals that characterises the tune. However, when healthy adults are required to detect rare deviant melodic patterns in a sequence of randomly transposed standard patterns they perform close to chance. Musically experienced participants perform better than naïve participants, but even they find the task difficult, despite the fact that musical education includes training in interval recognition.To understand the source of this difficulty we designed an experiment to explore the relative influence of the size of within-pattern intervals and between-pattern transpositions on detecting deviant melodic patterns. We found that task difficulty increases when patterns contain large intervals (5-7 semitones) rather than small intervals (1-3 semitones). While task difficulty increases substantially when transpositions are introduced, the effect of transposition size (large vs small) is weaker. Increasing the range of permissible intervals to be used also makes the task more difficult. Furthermore, providing an initial exact repetition followed by subsequent transpositions does not improve performance. Although musical training correlates with task performance, we find no evidence that violations to musical intervals important in Western music (i.e. the perfect fifth or fourth) are more easily detected. In summary, relative pitch perception does not appear to be conducive to simple explanations based exclusively on invariant physical ratios
Appetite suppressants and valvular heart disease - a systematic review
Background Although appetite suppressants have been implicated in the development of valvular heart disease, the exact level of risk is still uncertain. Initial studies suggested that as many as 1 in 3 exposed patients were affected, but subsequent research has yielded substantially different figures. Our objective was to systematically assess the risk of valvular heart disease with appetite suppressants. Methods We accepted studies involving obese patients treated with any of the following appetite suppressants: fenfluramine, dexfenfluramine, and phentermine. Three types of studies were reviewed: controlled and uncontrolled observational studies, and randomized controlled trials. Outcomes of interest were echocardiographically detectable aortic regurgitation of mild or greater severity, or mitral regurgitation of moderate or greater severity. Results Of the 1279 patients evaluated in seven uncontrolled cohort studies, 236 (18%) and 60 (5%) were found to have aortic and mitral regurgitation, respectively. Pooled data from six controlled cohort studies yielded, for aortic regurgitation, a relative risk ratio of 2.32 (95% confidence intervals 1.79 to 3.01, p < 0.00001) and an attributable rate of 4.9%, and for mitral regurgitation, a relative risk ratio of 1.55 (95% confidence intervals 1.06 to 2.25, p = 0.02) with an attributable rate of 1.0%. Only one case of valvular heart disease was detected in 57 randomized controlled trials, but this was judged unrelated to drug therapy. Conclusions The risk of valvular heart disease is significantly increased by the appetite suppressants reviewed here. Nevertheless, when considering all the evidence, valvulopathy is much less common than suggested by the initial, less methodologically rigorous studies
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