1,225 research outputs found
Dynamically balanced online random forests for interactive scribble-based segmentation
Interactive scribble-and-learning-based segmentation is attractive for its good performance and reduced number of user interaction. Scribbles for foreground and background are often imbalanced. With the arrival of new scribbles,the imbalance ratio may change largely. Failing to deal with imbalanced training data and a changing imbalance ratio may lead to a decreased sensitivity and accuracy for segmentation. We propose a generic Dynamically Balanced Online Random Forest (DyBa ORF) to deal with these problems,with a combination of a dynamically balanced online Bagging method and a tree growing and shrinking strategy to update the random forests. We validated DyBa ORF on UCI machine learning data sets and applied it to two different clinical applications: 2D segmentation of the placenta from fetal MRI and adult lungs from radiographic images. Experiments show it outperforms traditional ORF in dealing with imbalanced data with a changing imbalance ratio,while maintaining a comparable accuracy and a higher efficiency compared with its offline counterpart. Our results demonstrate that DyBa ORF is more suitable than existing ORF for learning-based interactive image segmentation
Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease: Lobar Analysis with Hyperpolarized 129Xe MR Imaging.
Purpose To compare lobar ventilation and apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) values obtained with hyperpolarized xenon 129 ((129)Xe) magnetic resonance (MR) imaging to quantitative computed tomography (CT) metrics on a lobar basis and pulmonary function test (PFT) results on a whole-lung basis in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). Materials and Methods The study was approved by the National Research Ethics Service Committee; written informed consent was obtained from all patients. Twenty-two patients with COPD (Global Initiative for Chronic Obstructive Lung Disease stage II-IV) underwent hyperpolarized (129)Xe MR imaging at 1.5 T, quantitative CT, and PFTs. Whole-lung and lobar (129)Xe MR imaging parameters were obtained by using automated segmentation of multisection hyperpolarized (129)Xe MR ventilation images and hyperpolarized (129)Xe MR diffusion-weighted images after coregistration to CT scans. Whole-lung and lobar quantitative CT-derived metrics for emphysema and bronchial wall thickness were calculated. Pearson correlation coefficients were used to evaluate the relationship between imaging measures and PFT results. Results Percentage ventilated volume and average ADC at lobar (129)Xe MR imaging showed correlation with percentage emphysema at lobar quantitative CT (r = -0.32, P < .001 and r = 0.75, P < .0001, respectively). The average ADC at whole-lung (129)Xe MR imaging showed moderate correlation with PFT results (percentage predicted transfer factor of the lung for carbon monoxide [Tlco]: r = -0.61, P < .005) and percentage predicted functional residual capacity (r = 0.47, P < .05). Whole-lung quantitative CT percentage emphysema also showed statistically significant correlation with percentage predicted Tlco (r = -0.65, P < .005). Conclusion Lobar ventilation and ADC values obtained from hyperpolarized (129)Xe MR imaging demonstrated correlation with quantitative CT percentage emphysema on a lobar basis and with PFT results on a whole-lung basis. (©) RSNA, 2016
Digital play and the actualisation of the consumer imagination
In this article, the authors consider emerging consumer practices in digital virtual spaces. Building on constructions of consumer behavior as both a sense-making activity and a resource for the construction of daydreams, as well as anthropological readings of performance, the authors speculate that many performances during digital play are products of consumer fantasy. The authors develop an interpretation of the relationship between the real and the virtual that is better equipped to understand the movement between consumer daydreams and those practices actualized in the material and now also in digital virtual reality. The authors argue that digital virtual performances present opportunities for liminoid transformations through inversions, speculations, and playfulness acted out in aesthetic dramas. To illustrate, the authors consider specific examples of the theatrical productions available to consumers in digital spaces, highlighting the consumer imagination that feeds them, the performances they produce, and the potential for transformation in consumer-players
The staggered domain wall fermion method
A different lattice fermion method is introduced. Staggered domain wall
fermions are defined in 2n+1 dimensions and describe 2^n flavors of light
lattice fermions with exact U(1) x U(1) chiral symmetry in 2n dimensions. As
the size of the extra dimension becomes large, 2^n chiral flavors with the same
chiral charge are expected to be localized on each boundary and the full
SU(2^n) x SU(2^n) flavor chiral symmetry is expected to be recovered. SDWF give
a different perspective into the inherent flavor mixing of lattice fermions and
by design present an advantage for numerical simulations of lattice QCD
thermodynamics. The chiral and topological index properties of the SDWF Dirac
operator are investigated. And, there is a surprise ending...Comment: revtex4, 7 figures, minor revisions, 2 references adde
The changing of the guard: groupwork with people who have intellectual disabilities
This paper considers the impact of service systems on group activities. It describes an inter-professional groupwork project facilitated by a social worker and a community nurse. The project provided an emancipatory experience for a group of adults who had intellectual disabilities. The group was charged with the task of reviewing and updating the recruitment and interview processes used by a 'Learning Disability Partnership Board', when employing new support workers.
The paper begins with a brief history of intellectual disability and provides a context to the underpinning philosophical belief that people should be encouraged and supported to inhabit valued social roles no matter what disability they may have. It then identifies the ways in which the sponsoring health, education and social care services impacted on the creation and development of a groupwork project. It might have been expected that the nature of the intellectual disability would have been the major influence on group process. However the paper reveals that organisational constraints had a significant impact on group functioning. Issues including, staffing budgets and transport contracts impacted on group process and function.
The results of the project show how, with adequate support, people with intellectual disability can make important decisions that have long-reaching impacts on the services
W(h)ither the academy? An exploration of the role of university social work in shaping the future of social work in Europe
A controversial proposal to pilot the training of child protection social workers through an intensive work-based route in England is being supported and funded by the UK Government. Frontline, the brainchild of a former teacher, locates social work training within local authorities (âthe agencyâ) rather than university social work departments (âthe academyâ) and has stimulated debate amongst social work academics about their role in shaping the direction of the profession. As a contribution to this debate, this paper explores the duality of social work education, which derives its knowledge from both the academic social sciences and the experience of practice within social work agencies. While social work education has traditionally been delivered by the academy, this paper also explores whether the delivery of training in the allied professions of probation and nursing by âthe agencyâ is equally effective. Finally, this paper explores the Helsinki model which achieves a synergy of âacademyâ and âagencyâ. It suggests that there are alternative models of social work education, practice and research which avoid dichotomies between the âacademyâ and the âagencyâ and enable the profession to be shaped by both social work academics and practitioners
Index Theorem and Overlap Formalism with Naive and Minimally Doubled Fermions
We present a theoretical foundation for the Index theorem in naive and
minimally doubled lattice fermions by studying the spectral flow of a Hermitean
version of Dirac operators. We utilize the point splitting method to implement
flavored mass terms, which play an important role in constructing proper
Hermitean operators. We show the spectral flow correctly detects the index of
the would-be zero modes which is determined by gauge field topology. Using the
flavored mass terms, we present new types of overlap fermions from the naive
fermion kernels, with a number of flavors that depends on the choice of the
mass terms. We succeed to obtain a single-flavor naive overlap fermion which
maintains hypercubic symmetry.Comment: 27 pages, 17 figures; references added, version accepted in JHE
Ginsparg-Wilson Fermions: A study in the Schwinger Model
Qualitative features of Ginsparg-Wilson fermions, as formulated by Neuberger,
coupled to two dimensional U(1) gauge theory are studied. The role of the
Wilson mass parameter in changing the number of massless flavors in the theory
and its connection with the index of the Dirac operator is studied. Although
the index of the Dirac operator is not related to the geometric definition of
the topological charge for strong couplings, the two start to agree as soon as
one goes to moderately weak couplings. This produces the desired singularity in
the quenched chiral condensate which appears to be very difficult to reproduce
with staggered fermions. The fermion determinant removes the singularity and
reproduces the known chiral condensate and the meson mass within understandable
errors.Comment: Corrected a few typos and changed some references. Minor changes to
the conten
Correlation between Infrared Colors and Intensity Ratios of SiO Maser Lines
We present the results of SiO millimeter-line observations of a sample of
known SiO maser sources covering a wide dust-temperature range. A cold part of
the sample was selected from the SiO maser sources found in our recent SiO
maser survey of cold dusty objects. The aim of the present research is to
investigate the causes of the correlation between infrared colors and SiO maser
intensity ratios among different transition lines. In particular, the
correlation between infrared colors and SiO maser intensity ratio among the
J=1-0 v=1, 2, and 3 lines are mainly concerned in this paper. We observed in
total 75 SiO maser sources with the Nobeyama 45m telescope quasi-simultaneously
in the SiO J=1-0 v=0, 1, 2, 3, 4 and J=2-1 v=1, 2 lines. We also observed the
sample in the 29SiO J=1-0 v=0 and J=2-1 v=0, and 30SiO J=1-0 v=0 lines, and the
H2O 6(1,6)-5(2,3) line. As reported in previous papers, we confirmed that the
intensity ratios of the SiO J=1-0 v=2 to v=1 lines clearly correlate with
infrared colors. In addition, we found possible correlation between infrared
colors and the intensity ratios of the SiO J=1-0 v=3 to v=1&2 lines. Two
overlap lines of H2O (i.e., 11(6,6) nu_2=1 -> 12(7,5) nu_2=0 and 5(0,5) nu_2=2
-> 6(3,4) nu_2=1) might explain these correlation if these overlap lines become
stronger with increase of infrared colors, although the phenomena also might be
explained by more fundamental ways if we take into account the variation of
opacity from object to object.Comment: 49 pages, 7 figures, 3 tables, accepted for publication in ApJ. Full
resolution version available at
http://www.asiaa.sinica.edu.tw/~junichi/paper
- âŠ