55 research outputs found

    Incorporating granularity bias as the margin into contrastive loss for video captioning

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    Video captioning models easily suffer from long-tail distribution of phrases, which makes captioning models prone to generate vague sentences instead of accurate ones. However, existing debiasing strategies tend to export external knowledge to build dependency trees of words or refine frequency distribution by complex losses and extra input features, which lack interpretability and are hard to train. To mitigate the impact of granularity bias on the model, we introduced a statistical-based bias extractor. This extractor quantifies the information content within sentences and videos, providing an estimate of the likelihood that a video-sentence pair is affected by granularity bias. Furthermore, with the growing trend of integrating contrastive learning methods into video captioning tasks, we use a bidirectional triplet loss to get more negative samples in a batch. Subsequently, we incorporate the margin score into the contrastive learning loss, establishing distinct training objectives for head and tail sentences. This approach facilitates the model's training effectiveness on tail samples. Our simple yet effective loss, incorporating Granularity bias, is referred to as the Margin-Contrastive Loss (GMC Loss). The proposed model demonstrates state-of-the-art performance on MSRVTT with a CIDEr of 57.17, and MSVD, where CIDEr reaches up to 138.68.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figure

    A comparative study on microstructure and properties of traditional laser cladding and high-speed laser cladding of Ni45 alloy coatings

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    High-speed laser cladding technology can significantly improve the efficiency of coating preparation and effectively widen the application range of laser cladding. In this study, the Ni45 powders were deposited on steel substrate by traditional low speed laser cladding and high-speed laser cladding process, respectively. The cladding efficiency, surface forming, cross-sectional microstructure, microhardness, wear and corrosion resistance properties of the traditional and high-speed laser cladded Ni45 alloy coatings were compared. It can be seen that the thickness of the high-speed laser cladding coating was much thinner than that of the traditional laser cladding coating. Compared with traditional laser cladding, high-speed laser cladding could achieve a cladding speed of 76.86 m/min and a cladding efficiency of 156.79 cm2/min. The microstructure of the two kinds of coatings shows the same growth law, but the microstructure in high-speed laser cladding was smaller and denser, and the columnar crystal interval was narrower, only about 6 μm. It is found that the cooling rate of the traditional laser cladding coating was smaller than that of the high-speed laser cladding, and as the cladding speed increased, the cooling rate became higher and higher. The cross-section microhardness of the traditional laser cladding coating was relatively uniform of 337 HV0.2, while the microhardness of high-speed laser cladding surface increased to about 543 HV0.2. In addition, the wear and corrosion resistance of high-speed laser cladded coatings were better than that of traditional laser cladded coatings. As the cladding speed increased, the wear and corrosion resistance of the cladded coatings became better

    Estimation of ischemic core in acute ischemic stroke with CT angiography and non-contrast CT: Attenuation changes in ASPECTS regions vs. automated ASPECTS scoring

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    PurposeReperfusion therapies for acute ischemic stroke due to large-vessel occlusion (AIS-LVO) are highly time-dependent, and large infarction is related to poor outcomes and risk of symptomatic hemorrhage. It is of significance to investigate and optimize the screening means and selection criteria for reperfusion therapies to identify more appropriate patients with better outcomes. This study aimed to compare the performance of attenuation changes vs. automated Alberta Stroke Program Early CT Score (ASPECTS) and using CT angiography (CTA) source images vs. non-contrast CT (NCCT) in distinguishing the infarction extent of ischemic core volumes ≥ 70 ml within different time windows.MethodsA total of 73 patients with AIS-LVO who received multimodal CT were analyzed. The automated software was used to calculate ASPECTS. Attenuation change was defined as the sum of products of relative Hounsfield unit (rHU) values times weighting factors of all 10 ASPECTS regions. rHU value of each region was the HU of the ischemic side over that of the contralateral. The corresponding weighting factors were the regression coefficients derived from a multivariable linear regression model which was used to correlate regional rHU with ischemic core volumes, because each region in the ASPECTS template is weighted disproportionally in the ASPECTS system. Automated ASPECTS and attenuation changes were both calculated using CTA and NCCT, respectively.ResultsAttenuation changes were correlated with ischemic core volumes within different time windows (Rho ranging from 0.439 to 0.637). In classification of the ischemic core ≥ 70 ml, the performances of attenuation changes were comparable with ASPECTS (area under the curve [AUC] ranging from 0.799 to 0.891), with DeLong’s test (P = 0.079, P = 0.373); using CTA (AUC = 0.842) was not different from NCCT (AUC = 0.838).ConclusionAttenuation changes in ASPECTS regions were correlated with ischemic core volumes. In the classification of infarction volumes, attenuation changes had a high diagnostic ability comparable with automated ASPECTS. Measurement of attenuation changes is not involved in complicated scoring algorithms. This measurement can be used as an available, rapid, reliable, and accurate means to evaluate infarction extent within different time windows. The usefulness of infarction volumes measured by attenuation changes to identify more appropriate patients for reperfusion therapies can be validated in future clinical trials

    Fashionably Late? Building up the Milky Way's Inner Halo

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    Using a sample of 248 metal-poor stars (RR Lyraes, red giants and RHB stars) which is remarkable for the accuracy of its 6-D kinematical data, we find a new component for the local halo which has an axial ratio c/a ~ 0.2, a similar flattening to the thick disk. It has a small prograde rotation but is supported by velocity anisotropy, and contains more intermediate-metallicity stars (with -1.5 < [Fe/H] < -1.0) than the rest of our sample. We suggest that this component was formed quite late, during or after the formation of the disk. It formed either from the gas that was accreted by the last major mergers experienced by the Galaxy, or by dynamical friction of massive infalling satellite(s) with the halo and possibly the stellar disk or thick disk. The remainder of the stars in our sample exhibit a clumpy distribution in energy and angular momentum, suggesting that the early, chaotic conditions under which the inner halo formed were not violent enough to erase the record of their origins. The clumpy structure suggests that a relatively small number of progenitors were responsible for building up the inner halo, in line with theoretical expectations. We find a difference in mean binding energy between the RR Lyrae variables and the red giants in our sample, suggesting that more of the RR Lyraes in the sample belong to the outer halo, and that the outer halo may be somewhat younger, as first suggested by Searle and Zinn (1978). We also find that the RR Lyrae mean rotation is more negative than the red giants, which is consistent with the recent result of Carollo et al.(2007) that the outer halo has a retrograde rotation and with the difference in kinematics seen between RR Lyraes and BHB stars by Kinman et al.(2007).Comment: 16 pages, 10 figures, this version accepted by Ap

    Finishing the euchromatic sequence of the human genome

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    The sequence of the human genome encodes the genetic instructions for human physiology, as well as rich information about human evolution. In 2001, the International Human Genome Sequencing Consortium reported a draft sequence of the euchromatic portion of the human genome. Since then, the international collaboration has worked to convert this draft into a genome sequence with high accuracy and nearly complete coverage. Here, we report the result of this finishing process. The current genome sequence (Build 35) contains 2.85 billion nucleotides interrupted by only 341 gaps. It covers ∼99% of the euchromatic genome and is accurate to an error rate of ∼1 event per 100,000 bases. Many of the remaining euchromatic gaps are associated with segmental duplications and will require focused work with new methods. The near-complete sequence, the first for a vertebrate, greatly improves the precision of biological analyses of the human genome including studies of gene number, birth and death. Notably, the human enome seems to encode only 20,000-25,000 protein-coding genes. The genome sequence reported here should serve as a firm foundation for biomedical research in the decades ahead

    Digital case-based learning system in school

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    <div><p>With the continuing growth of multi-media learning resources, it is important to offer methods helping learners to explore and acquire relevant learning information effectively. As services that organize multi-media learning materials together to support programming learning, the digital case-based learning system is needed. In order to create a case-oriented e-learning system, this paper concentrates on the digital case study of multi-media resources and learning processes with an integrated framework. An integration of multi-media resources, testing and learning strategies recommendation as the learning unit is proposed in the digital case-based learning framework. The learning mechanism of learning guidance, multi-media materials learning and testing feedback is supported in our project. An improved personalized genetic algorithm which incorporates preference information and usage degree into the crossover and mutation process is proposed to assemble the personalized test sheet for each learner. A learning strategies recommendation solution is proposed to recommend learning strategies for learners to help them to learn. The experiments are conducted to prove that the proposed approaches are capable of constructing personalized sheets and the effectiveness of the framework.</p></div

    Percentage of mastered knowledge point referring to different learners.

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    <p>Percentage of mastered knowledge point referring to different learners.</p

    The framework of the digital case-based learning system.

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    <p>The framework of the digital case-based learning system.</p

    Learning strategy recommendation solution for the second and third type of learner.

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    <p>Learning strategy recommendation solution for the second and third type of learner.</p
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