491 research outputs found
Epistemic Uncertainty-Weighted Loss for Visual Bias Mitigation
Deep neural networks are highly susceptible to learning biases in visual
data. While various methods have been proposed to mitigate such bias, the
majority require explicit knowledge of the biases present in the training data
in order to mitigate. We argue the relevance of exploring methods which are
completely ignorant of the presence of any bias, but are capable of identifying
and mitigating them. Furthermore, we propose using Bayesian neural networks
with an epistemic uncertainty-weighted loss function to dynamically identify
potential bias in individual training samples and to weight them during
training. We find a positive correlation between samples subject to bias and
higher epistemic uncertainties. Finally, we show the method has potential to
mitigate visual bias on a bias benchmark dataset and on a real-world face
detection problem, and we consider the merits and weaknesses of our approach.Comment: To be published in 2022 IEEE CVPR Workshop on Fair, Data Efficient
and Trusted Computer Visio
Bayesian uncertainty-weighted loss for improved generalisability on polyp segmentation task
While several previous studies have devised methods for segmentation of
polyps, most of these methods are not rigorously assessed on multi-center
datasets. Variability due to appearance of polyps from one center to another,
difference in endoscopic instrument grades, and acquisition quality result in
methods with good performance on in-distribution test data, and poor
performance on out-of-distribution or underrepresented samples. Unfair models
have serious implications and pose a critical challenge to clinical
applications. We adapt an implicit bias mitigation method which leverages
Bayesian epistemic uncertainties during training to encourage the model to
focus on underrepresented sample regions. We demonstrate the potential of this
approach to improve generalisability without sacrificing state-of-the-art
performance on a challenging multi-center polyp segmentation dataset (PolypGen)
with different centers and image modalities.Comment: To be presented at the Fairness of AI in Medical Imaging (FAIMI)
MICCAI 2023 Workshop and published in volumes of the Springer Lecture Notes
Computer Science (LNCS) serie
Assessment of the inherent allergenic potential of proteins in mice.
There is considerable interest in the design of approaches that will permit the accurate identification and characterization of proteins that have the inherent potential to induce sensitization and cause food allergy. Among the methods used currently as part of such assessments are consideration of structural similarity to, or amino acid sequence homology with, known human allergens; whether there exists immunologic cross-reactivity with known allergens; and measurement of resistance to proteolytic digestion in a simulated gastric fluid. Although such approaches provide information that will contribute to a safety assessment, they do not--either individually or collectively--provide a direct evaluation of the ability of a novel protein to cause allergic sensitization. For this reason, work is in progress to design and evaluate suitable animal models that will provide a more holistic assessment of allergenic potential. In this laboratory, the approach we have taken has been to examine the characteristics of immune responses induced in mice following parenteral (intraperitoneal) exposure to test proteins. The basis of this method is to determine simultaneously the overall immunogenic potential of proteins [measured as a function of immunoglobulin (Ig) G antibody responses] and to compare this with their ability to provoke IgE antibody production, IgE being the antibody that effects allergic sensitization. Although this approach has not yet been evaluated fully, the results available to date suggest that it will be possible to distinguish proteins that have the inherent potential to induce allergic sensitization from those that do not. In this article we summarize progress to date in the context of the scientific background against which such methods are being developed
Documenting Nursing and Medical Studentsâ Stereotypes about Hispanic and American Indian Patients
Objective: Hispanic Americans and American Indians face significant health disparities compared with White Americans. Research suggests that stereotyping of minority patients by members of the medical community is an important antecedent of race and ethnicity-based health disparities. This work has primarily focused on physiciansâ perceptions, however, and little research has examined the stereotypes healthcare personnel associate with Hispanic and American Indian patients. The present study assesses: 1) the health-related stereotypes both nursing and medical students hold about Hispanic and American Indian patients, and 2) nursing and medical studentsâ motivation to treat Hispanic and American Indian patients in an unbiased manner.
Design: Participants completed a questionnaire assessing their awareness of stereotypes that healthcare professionals associate with Hispanic and American Indian patients then completed measures of their motivation to treat Hispanics and American Indians in an unbiased manner.
Results: Despite being highly motivated to treat Hispanic and American Indian individuals fairly, the majority of participants reported awareness of stereotypes associating these patient groups with noncompliance, risky health behavior, and difficulty understanding and/or communicating health-related information.
Conclusion: This research provides direct evidence for negative health-related stereotypes associated with two understudied minority patient groupsâHispanics and American Indiansâamong both nursing and medical personnel
RegeneraciĂłn de las cĂ©lulas ciliadas auditivas: Un tratamiento potencial para los problemas de oĂdo en el horizonte
Hearing requires good health of the hair cells to ensure that the sound is detected and processed correctly. They degenerate and die due to age or exposition to high intensity sound, among other causes, and usually they do not regenerate. Some research results about possible regeneration of cochlear hair cells that suggest the possibility of treatment for hearing impairment due to this disease are presented in this paper..La audicioÌn requiere de la buena salud de las ceÌlulas ciliadas (vello) para garantizar que el sonido se detecte y procese correctamente. EÌstas se degeneran y mueren con la edad o por la exposicioÌn a sonido intenso, entre otras causas, y normalmente no se regeneran. Se presentan algunos resultados de la investigacioÌn sobre la posible regeneracioÌn de las ceÌlulas ciliadas cocleares que sugieren que existe la posibilidad de un tratamiento para la discapacidad auditiva debida a esta enfermedad
Managing uncertainty and references to time in prognostic conversations with family members at the end of life : a conversation analytic study
Background:
When patients are likely to die in the coming hours or days, families often want prognostic information. Prognostic uncertainty and a lack of end-of-life communication training make these conversations challenging.
Aim:
The objective of this study is to understand how clinicians and the relatives/friends of patients at the very end of life manage uncertainty and reference time in prognostic conversations.
Design:
Conversation analysis of audio-recorded conversations between clinicians and the relatives/friends of hospice inpatients.
Setting/participants:
Experienced palliative care clinicians and relatives/friends of imminently dying hospice inpatients. Twenty-three recorded conversations involved prognostic talk and were included in the analysis.
Results:
Requests for prognostic information were initiated by families in the majority of conversations. Clinicians responded using categorical time references such as âdaysâ, allowing the provision of prognostic estimates without giving a precise time. Explicit terms such as âdyingâ were rare during prognostic discussions. Instead, references to time were understood as relating to prognosis. Relatives displayed their awareness of prognostic uncertainty when requesting prognostic information, providing clinicians with âpermissionâ to be uncertain. In response, clinicians often stated their uncertainty explicitly, but presented evidence for their prognostic estimates, based on changes to the patientâs function previously discussed with the family.
Conclusion:
Prognostic uncertainty was managed collaboratively by clinicians and families. Clinicians were able to provide prognostic estimates while being honest about the related uncertainty, in part because relatives displayed their awareness of uncertainty within their requests. The conversation analytic method identified contributions of both clinicians and families, and identified strategies based on real interactions, which could inform communication training
'She's like a daughter to me': insights into care, work and kinship from rural Russia
This article draws on ethnographic research into a state-funded homecare service in rural Russia. The article discusses intersections between care, work and kinship in the relationships between homecare workers and their elderly wards and explores the ways in which references to kinship, as a means of authenticating paid care and explaining its emotional content, reinforce public and private oppositions while doing little to relieve the tensions and conflicts of care work. The discussion brings together detailed empirical insights into local ideologies and practices as a way of generating new theoretical perspectives, which will be of relevance beyond the particular context of study
Diagnostic stability in young children at risk for autism spectrum disorder:A baby siblings research consortium study
BACKGROUND: The diagnosis of autism spectrum disorder (ASD) made before age 3 has been found to be remarkably stable in clinic- and community-ascertained samples. The stability of an ASD diagnosis in prospectively ascertained samples of infants at risk for ASD due to familial factors has not yet been studied, however. The American Academy of Pediatrics recommends intensive surveillance and screening for this high-risk group, which may afford earlier identification. Therefore, it is critical to understand the stability of an ASD diagnosis made before age 3 in young children at familial risk. METHODS: Data were pooled across 7 sites of the Baby Siblings Research Consortium. Evaluations of 418 later-born siblings of children with ASD were conducted at 18, 24, and 36 months of age and a clinical diagnosis of ASD or Not ASD was made at each age. RESULTS: The stability of an ASD diagnosis at 18 months was 93% and at 24 months was 82%. There were relatively few children diagnosed with ASD at 18 or 24 months whose diagnosis was not confirmed at 36 months. There were, however, many children with ASD outcomes at 36 months who had not yet been diagnosed at 18 months (63%) or 24 months (41%). CONCLUSIONS: The stability of an ASD diagnosis in this familial-risk sample was high at both 18 and 24 months of age and comparable with previous data from clinic- and community-ascertained samples. However, almost half of children with ASD outcomes were not identified as being on the spectrum at 24 months and did not receive an ASD diagnosis until 36 months. Thus, longitudinal follow-up is critical for children with early signs of social-communication difficulties, even if they do not meet diagnostic criteria at initial assessment. A public health implication of these data is that screening for ASD may need to be repeated multiple times in the first years of life. These data also suggest that there is a period of early development in which ASD features unfold and emerge but have not yet reached levels supportive of a diagnosis
Salpingectomy for Ovarian Cancer Prevention: Video Education for the Surgeon
Given the unremitting obstacles to effectively screen for and treat ovarian cancer (OC), prevention is a necessary countermeasure. The recent discovery of the fallopian tube as the origin of the most common and deadly type of OC, high grade serous cancer (HGSC), makes prevention through salpingectomy possible (Madsen et al., 2015). Opportunistic salpingectomy (OS) is the practice of removing the post-reproductive fallopian tubes at the time of other intraperitoneal surgery, or for sterilization in lieu of tubal ligation, to decrease OC risk (Falconer et al., 2015). The safety, effectiveness, and reach of OS as a primary prevention strategy depends on the knowledge mobilization of a standard surgical approach for surgeons (Hanley et al., 2017, Morelli et al., 2013). Resources for accomplishing this knowledge mobilization activity are needed. We therefore aim to create a peer-reviewed, publicly available surgical instructional video that facilitates standardization of the practice of salpingectomy for the purpose of OC prevention. Content creation was generated by a team of surgeon stakeholders, medical illustrators, instructional designers, and health education specialists. Expert gynecologic surgeons were filmed performing salpingectomy in order to build a video library. Accurate illustration and editing of live video footage was executed to support surgeons in visualizing key anatomic landmarks to ensure safe and complete fallopian tube excision. Review of eligibility criteria, fundamentals of preoperative counseling, and strategic and technical points were prioritized. This endeavor is strictly educational, with no commercial benefit. Publicly available, peer-reviewed surgical education tools will help us collaborate to safely and equitably expand OS within and beyond the current scope of surgical practice
The First Detections of the Extragalactic Background Light at 3000, 5500, and 8000A (II): Measurement of Foreground Zodiacal Light
We present a measurement of the absolute surface brightness of the zodiacal
light (3900-5100A) toward a fixed extragalactic target at high ecliptic
latitude based on moderate resolution (~1.3A per pixel) spectrophotometry
obtained with the du Pont 2.5m telescope at Las Campanas Observatory in Chile.
This measurement and contemporaneous Hubble Space Telescope data from WFPC2 and
FOS comprise a coordinated program to measure the mean flux of the diffuse
extragalactic background light (EBL). The zodiacal light at optical wavelengths
results from scattering by interplanetary dust, so that the zodiacal light flux
toward any extragalactic target varies seasonally with the position of the
Earth. This measurement of zodiacal light is therefore relevant to the specific
observations (date and target field) under discussion. To obtain this result,
we have developed a technique that uses the strength of the zodiacal Fraunhofer
lines to identify the absolute flux of the zodiacal light in the
multiple-component night sky spectrum. Statistical uncertainties in the result
are 0.6% (1 sigma). However, the dominant source of uncertainty is systematic
errors, which we estimate to be 1.1% (1 sigma). We discuss the contributions
included in this estimate explicitly. The systematic errors in this result
contribute 25% in quadrature to the final error in our coordinated EBL
measurement, which is presented in the first paper of this series.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ, 22 pages using emulateapj.sty,
version with higher resolution figures available at
http://www.astro.lsa.umich.edu/~rab/publications.html or at
http://nedwww.ipac.caltech.edu/level5/Sep01/Bernstein2/frames.htm
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