49 research outputs found
Large-scale Vietnamese point-of-interest classification using weak labeling
Point-of-Interests (POIs) represent geographic location by different categories (e.g., touristic places, amenities, or shops) and play a prominent role in several location-based applications. However, the majority of POIs category labels are crowd-sourced by the community, thus often of low quality. In this paper, we introduce the first annotated dataset for the POIs categorical classification task in Vietnamese. A total of 750,000 POIs are collected from WeMap, a Vietnamese digital map. Large-scale hand-labeling is inherently time-consuming and labor-intensive, thus we have proposed a new approach using weak labeling. As a result, our dataset covers 15 categories with 275,000 weak-labeled POIs for training, and 30,000 gold-standard POIs for testing, making it the largest compared to the existing Vietnamese POIs dataset. We empirically conduct POI categorical classification experiments using a strong baseline (BERT-based fine-tuning) on our dataset and find that our approach shows high efficiency and is applicable on a large scale. The proposed baseline gives an F1 score of 90% on the test dataset, and significantly improves the accuracy of WeMap POI data by a margin of 37% (from 56 to 93%)
Optimizing the Transition Waste in Coded Elastic Computing
Distributed computing, in which a resource-intensive task is divided into
subtasks and distributed among different machines, plays a key role in solving
large-scale problems, e.g., machine learning for large datasets or massive
computational problems arising in genomic research. Coded computing is a
recently emerging paradigm where redundancy for distributed computing is
introduced to alleviate the impact of slow machines, or stragglers, on the
completion time. Motivated by recently available services in the cloud
computing industry, e.g., EC2 Spot or Azure Batch, where spare/low-priority
virtual machines are offered at a fraction of the price of the on-demand
instances but can be preempted in a short notice, we investigate coded
computing solutions over elastic resources, where the set of available machines
may change in the middle of the computation. Our contributions are two-fold: We
first propose an efficient method to minimize the transition waste, a newly
introduced concept quantifying the total number of tasks that existing machines
have to abandon or take on anew when a machine joins or leaves, for the cyclic
elastic task allocation scheme recently proposed in the literature (Yang et al.
ISIT'19). We then proceed to generalize such a scheme and introduce new task
allocation schemes based on finite geometry that achieve zero transition wastes
as long as the number of active machines varies within a fixed range. The
proposed solutions can be applied on top of every existing coded computing
scheme tolerating stragglers.Comment: 16 page
An Evaluation of Programmatic Community-Based Chest X-ray Screening for Tuberculosis in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam.
Across Asia, a large proportion of people with tuberculosis (TB) do not report symptoms, have mild symptoms or only experience symptoms for a short duration. These individuals may not seek care at health facilities or may be missed by symptom screening, resulting in sustained TB transmission in the community. We evaluated the yields of TB from 114 days of community-based, mobile chest X-ray (CXR) screening. The yields at each step of the TB screening cascade were tabulated and we compared cohorts of participants who reported having a prolonged cough and those reporting no cough or one of short duration. We estimated the marginal yields of TB using different diagnostic algorithms and calculated the relative diagnostic costs and cost per case for each algorithm. A total of 34,529 participants were screened by CXR, detecting 256 people with Xpert-positive TB. Only 50% of those diagnosed with TB were detected among participants reporting a prolonged cough. The study's screening algorithm detected almost 4 times as much TB as the National TB Program's standard diagnostic algorithm. Community-based, mobile chest X-ray screening can be a high yielding strategy which is able to identify people with TB who would likely otherwise have been missed by existing health services
Impact of opioid-free analgesia on pain severity and patient satisfaction after discharge from surgery: multispecialty, prospective cohort study in 25 countries
Background: Balancing opioid stewardship and the need for adequate analgesia following discharge after surgery is challenging. This study aimed to compare the outcomes for patients discharged with opioid versus opioid-free analgesia after common surgical procedures.Methods: This international, multicentre, prospective cohort study collected data from patients undergoing common acute and elective general surgical, urological, gynaecological, and orthopaedic procedures. The primary outcomes were patient-reported time in severe pain measured on a numerical analogue scale from 0 to 100% and patient-reported satisfaction with pain relief during the first week following discharge. Data were collected by in-hospital chart review and patient telephone interview 1 week after discharge.Results: The study recruited 4273 patients from 144 centres in 25 countries; 1311 patients (30.7%) were prescribed opioid analgesia at discharge. Patients reported being in severe pain for 10 (i.q.r. 1-30)% of the first week after discharge and rated satisfaction with analgesia as 90 (i.q.r. 80-100) of 100. After adjustment for confounders, opioid analgesia on discharge was independently associated with increased pain severity (risk ratio 1.52, 95% c.i. 1.31 to 1.76; P < 0.001) and re-presentation to healthcare providers owing to side-effects of medication (OR 2.38, 95% c.i. 1.36 to 4.17; P = 0.004), but not with satisfaction with analgesia (beta coefficient 0.92, 95% c.i. -1.52 to 3.36; P = 0.468) compared with opioid-free analgesia. Although opioid prescribing varied greatly between high-income and low- and middle-income countries, patient-reported outcomes did not.Conclusion: Opioid analgesia prescription on surgical discharge is associated with a higher risk of re-presentation owing to side-effects of medication and increased patient-reported pain, but not with changes in patient-reported satisfaction. Opioid-free discharge analgesia should be adopted routinely
津軽海峡を通した潮汐交換過程に関する数値的研究
京都大学0048新制・課程博士博士(理学)甲第16641号理博第3753号新制||理||1543(附属図書館)29316京都大学大学院理学研究科地球惑星科学専攻(主査)教授 淡路 敏之, 准教授 秋友 和典, 教授 町田 忍学位規則第4条第1項該当Doctor of ScienceKyoto UniversityDA
Reconstruction of gappy mean sea level data
1316-1321Missing
data is a common problem in sea level records, and yet gappy records may hinder
estimates of sea level trend and variability. Sea level may be affected by
various scale phenomena, ranging from global climate change to interannual sea
level pattern caused by coupled ocean-atmosphere oscillations, as well as by
many other regional phenomena. It could be expected that such complexity make
sea level analysis more difficult; however, if relationships between the above
phenomena and sea level values are established for continuous parts of the
record, they can be used for reconstruction of the gappy parts. In this study,
we derive simple and robust method of reconstruction of the gappy data in the Singapore Strait using established relationships of sea
level on the El Ni<span style="font-size:11.0pt;font-family:
" times="" new="" roman";mso-fareast-font-family:"times="" roman";mso-bidi-font-family:="" mangal;mso-ansi-language:en-gb;mso-fareast-language:en-us;mso-bidi-language:="" hi"="" lang="EN-GB">ño-Southern
Oscillation (ENSO) and the Asian monsoon. The reconstructed mean sea level is
verified against observations, and allows for more accurate estimation of sea
level trend and variability in the Singapore Strait.</span