363 research outputs found
Clustering of illustrations by atmosphere using a combination of supervised and unsupervised learning
The distribution of illustrations on social media, such as Twitter and Pixiv
has increased with the growing popularity of animation, games, and animated
movies. The "atmosphere" of illustrations plays an important role in user
preferences. Classifying illustrations by atmosphere can be helpful for
recommendations and searches. However, assigning clear labels to the elusive
"atmosphere" and conventional supervised classification is not always
practical. Furthermore, even images with similar colors, edges, and low-level
features may not have similar atmospheres, making classification based on
low-level features challenging. In this paper, this problem is solved using
both supervised and unsupervised learning with pseudo-labels. The feature
vectors are obtained using the supervised method with pseudo-labels that
contribute to an ambiguous atmosphere. Further, clustering is performed based
on these feature vectors. Experimental analyses show that our method
outperforms conventional methods in human-like clustering on datasets manually
classified by humans.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure
HDR Image Watermarking
In this Chapter we survey available solutions for HDR image watermarking. First, we briefly discuss watermarking in general terms, with particular emphasis on its requirements that primarily include security, robustness, imperceptibility, capacity and the availability of the original image during recovery. However, with respect to traditional image watermarking, HDR images possess a unique set of features such as an extended range of luminance values to work with and tone-mapping operators against whom it is essential to be robust. These clearly affect the HDR watermarking algorithms proposed in the literature, which we extensively review next, including a thorough analysis of the reported experimental results. As a working example, we also describe the HDR watermarking system that we recently proposed and that focuses on combining imperceptibility, security and robustness to TM operators at the expense of capacity. We conclude the chapter with a critical analysis of the current state and future directions of the watermarking applications in the HDR domain
Trend-based Document Clustering for Sensitive and Stable Topic Detection
PACLIC / The University of the Philippines Visayas Cebu College Cebu City, Philippines / November 20-22, 200
SubPatch: Random kd-tree on a sub-sampled patch set for nearest neighbor field estimation
We propose a new method to compute the approximate nearest-neighbors field (ANNF) between image pairs using random kd-tree and patch set sub-sampling. By exploiting image coherence we demonstrate that it is possible to reduce the number of patches on which we compute the ANNF, while maintaining high overall accuracy on the final result. Information on missing patches is then recovered by interpolation and propagation of good matches. The introduction of the sub-sampling factor on patch sets also allows for setting the desired trade off between accuracy and speed, providing a flexibility that lacks in state-of-the-art methods. Tests conducted on a public database prove that our algorithm achieves superior performance with respect to PatchMatch (PM) and Coherence Sensitivity Hashing (CSH) algorithms in a comparable computational time
Contribution of human organic anion transporter 3-mediated transport of a major linezolid metabolite, PNU-142586, in linezolid-induced thrombocytopenia
Wang D., Ikemura K., Hasegawa T., et al. Contribution of human organic anion transporter 3-mediated transport of a major linezolid metabolite, PNU-142586, in linezolid-induced thrombocytopenia. Biomedicine and Pharmacotherapy 175, 116801 (2024); https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biopha.2024.116801.Thrombocytopenia, a common adverse effect of linezolid, often occurs in patients lacking typical risk factors. In this study, we investigated the key risk factors for linezolid-induced thrombocytopenia using two real-world clinical databases and explored its underlying mechanism through in vitro and in vivo experiments. In a retrospective analysis of 150 linezolid-treated patients, multivariate analysis identified coadministration of lansoprazole, a proton pump inhibitor, as a significant independent risk factor for thrombocytopenia (odds ratio: 2.33, p = 0.034). Additionally, analysis of the Food and Drug Administration Adverse Event Reporting System database revealed a reporting odds ratio of thrombocytopenia for lansoprazole of 1.64 (95% CI: 1.25–2.16). In vitro studies showed that the uptake of PNU-142586, a major linezolid metabolite, was significantly higher in human organic anion transporter 3-expressing HEK293 (HEK-hOAT3) cells compared to HEK-pBK cells. The apparent IC50 value of lansoprazole against hOAT3-mediated transport of PNU-142586 was 0.59 ± 0.38 µM. In a pharmacokinetic study using rats, coadministration of linezolid with lansoprazole intravenously resulted in approximately a 1.7-fold increase in the area under the plasma concentration-time curve of PNU-142586, but not linezolid and PNU-142300. Moreover, PNU-142586, but not linezolid, exhibited concentration-dependent cytotoxicity in a human megakaryocytic cell line. These findings suggest that linezolid-induced thrombocytopenia should be due to delayed elimination of PNU-142586. Furthermore, delayed elimination of PNU-142586 due to renal failure and hOAT3-mediated transport inhibition by lansoprazole should exacerbate linezolid-induced thrombocytopenia
Solution structure of multi-domain protein ER-60 studied by aggregation-free SAXS and coarse-grained-MD simulation
Multi-domain proteins (MDPs) show a variety of domain conformations under physiological conditions, regulating their functions through such conformational changes. One of the typical MDPs, ER-60 which is a protein folding enzyme, has a U-shape with four domains and is thought to have different domain conformations in solution depending on the redox state at the active centres of the edge domains. In this work, an aggregation-free small-angle X-ray scattering revealed that the structures of oxidized and reduced ER-60 in solution are different from each other and are also different from those in the crystal. Furthermore, structural modelling with coarse-grained molecular dynamics simulation indicated that the distance between the two edge domains of oxidized ER-60 is longer than that of reduced ER-60. In addition, one of the edge domains has a more flexible conformation than the other
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