193 research outputs found

    Language is more than that

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    Circle-based Eye Center Localization (CECL)

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    We propose an improved eye center localization method based on the Hough transform, called Circle-based Eye Center Localization (CECL) that is simple, robust, and achieves accuracy on a par with typically more complex state-of-the-art methods. The CECL method relies on color and shape cues that distinguish the iris from other facial structures. The accuracy of the CECL method is demonstrated through a comparison with 15 state-of-the-art eye center localization methods against five error thresholds, as reported in the literature. The CECL method achieved an accuracy of 80.8% to 99.4% and ranked first for 2 of the 5 thresholds. It is concluded that the CECL method offers an attractive alternative to existing methods for automatic eye center localization.Comment: Published and presented at The 14th IAPR International Conference on Machine Vision Applications, 2015. http://www.mva-org.jp/mva2015

    Towards automatic generation of multimodal answers to medical questions: a cognitive engineering approach

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    This paper describes a production experiment carried out to determine which modalities people choose to answer different types of questions. In this experiment participants had to create (multimodal) presentations of answers to general medical questions. The collected answer presentations were coded on types of manipulations (typographic, spatial, graphical), presence of visual media (i.e., photos, graphics, and animations), functions and position of these visual media. The results of a first analysis indicated that participants presented the information in a multimodal way. Moreover, significant differences were found in the information presentation of different answer and question types

    Taal is meer dan dat

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    On the Role of Visuals in Multimodal Answers to Medical Questions

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    This paper describes two experiments carried out in order to investigate the role of visuals in multimodal answer presentations for a medical question answering system. First, a production experiment was carried out to determine which modalities people choose to answer different types of questions. In this experiment, participants had to create (multimodal) presentations of answers to general medical questions. The collected answer presentations were coded on the presence of visual media (i.e., photos, graphics, and animations) and their function. The results indicated that participants presented the information in a multimodal way. Moreover, significant differences were found in the presentation of different answer and question types. Next, an evaluation experiment was conducted to investigate how users evaluate different types of multimodal answer presentations. In this second experiment, participants had\ud to assess the informativity and attractiveness of answer presentations for different types of medical questions. These answer presentations, originating from the production experiment, were manipulated in their answer length (brief vs. extended) and their type of picture (illustrative vs. informative). After the participants had assessed the answer presentations, they received a post-\ud test in which they had to indicate how much they had recalled from the presented answer presentations. The results showed that answer presentations with an informative picture were evaluated as more informative and more attractive than answer presentations with an illustrative picture. The results for the post-test tentatively indicated that learning from answer presentations with an informative picture leads to a better learning performance than learning from purely textual answer presentations

    Talking about Relations:Factors Influencing the Production of Relational Descriptions

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    In a production experiment (Experiment 1) and an acceptability rating one (Experiment 2), we assessed two factors, spatial position and salience, which may influence the production of relational descriptions (such as the ball between the man and the drawer). In Experiment 1, speakers were asked to refer unambiguously to a target object (a ball). In Experiment 1a, we addressed the role of spatial position, more specifically if speakers mention the entity positioned leftmost in the scene as (first) relatum. The results showed a preference to start with the left entity, however, only as a trend, which leaves room for other factors that could influence spatial reference. Thus, in the following studies, we varied salience systematically, by making one of the relatum candidates animate (Experiment 1b), and by adding attention capture cues, first subliminally by priming one relatum candidate with a flash (Experiment 1c), then explicitly by using salient colors for objects (Experiment 1d). Results indicate that spatial position played a dominant role. Entities on the left were mentioned more often as (first) relatum than those on the right (Experiment 1a, 1b, 1c, 1d). Animacy affected reference production in one out of three studies (in Experiment 1d). When salience was manipulated by priming visual attention or by using salient colors, there were no significant effects (Experiment 1c, 1d). In the acceptability rating study (Experiment 2), participants expressed their preference for specific relata, by ranking descriptions on the basis of how good they thought the descriptions fitted the scene. Results show that participants preferred most the description that had an animate entity as the first mentioned relatum. The relevance of these results for models of reference production is discussed

    811-1 Evolution of Left Ventricular Function, Myocardial Perfusion and Metabolism in Infarct Patients After Coronary Thrombolysis

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    Follow-up of regional myocardial blood flow, metabolism and function was studied in a population of thrombolysed patients. Fifty one patients with an acute myocardial infarction were prospectively enrolled. All patients received thrombolytic therapy within 6 hours after the onset of symptoms. Coronary angiography, 2D-echocardiography and 13NH3/18FDG PET were performed 5 days after the acute event. Three months after the infarction, 2D-echocardiography and 13NH3/18FDG PET studies were repeated.Thirty six patients (62% with TIMI III, 7% with TIMI II) revealed a concordant decrease of flow and metabolism in the infarct area (PET match). Fifteen patients (33% with TIMI III, 13% with TIMI II) revealed a decrease of flow with preservation of metabolism (PET mismatch). Twelve patients received further treatment (PTCA or CAGB) after the first PET scan. Myocardial blood flow improved significantly in both match (71±17ml/min/l00g at 3 months versus 60±17ml/min/100 g at 5 days, p<0.01) and mismatch groups (71±26ml/min/l00 g at 3 months versus 63 ±18ml/min/100 g at 5 days, p<0.05). Blood flow in remote areas did not change significantly (84±18mllmin/l 00 g at 3 months versus 82±19ml/min/l 00 gat 5 days, p=NS). In 4 patients with a match pattern at 5 days, a mismatch pattern had developed 3 months after the acute event.Functional follow-up was performed in 30 patients, 23 with a match pattern and 7 with a mismatch pattern. A variable outcome was observed: In 3 out of 7 mismatch areas contractility did not improve. On the contrary, 9 out of 23 match areas revealed functional improvement.It can be concluded that in this population of early thrombolysed patients, few mismatches were observed (29%). Flow values improved significantly in both match and mismatch groups 3 months after the acute event. In some patients, a mismatch pattern was found after 3 months, suggesting the need for further treatment. Functional outcome was variable, probably due to a variety of pathophysiologic processes such as stunning shortly after reperfusion with functional improvement after 3 months, reocclusion or progression of coronary artery disease resulting in reinfarction or hibernation

    Genetic, Maternal and Placental Factors in the Association between Birth Weight and Physical Fitness: A Longitudinal Twin Study

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    Background Adult cardiorespiratory fitness and muscle strength are related to all-cause and cardiovascular mortality. Both are possibly related to birth weight, but it is unclear what the importance is of genetic, maternal and placental factors in these associations. Design Peak oxygen uptake and measures of strength, flexibility and balance were obtained yearly during adolescence (10–18 years) in 114 twin pairs in the Leuven Longitudinal Twin Study. Their birth weights had been collected prospectively within the East Flanders Prospective Twin Survey. Results We identified linear associations between birth weight and adolescent vertical jump (b = 1.96 cm per kg birth weight, P = 0.02), arm pull (b = 1.85 kg per kg birth weight P = 0.03) and flamingo balance (b = −1.82 attempts to stand one minute per kg birth weight, P = 0.03). Maximum oxygen uptake appeared to have a U-shaped association with birth weight (the smallest and largest children had the lowest uptake, P = 0.01), but this association was no longer significant after adjustment for parental BMI. Using the individual twin’s deviation from his own twin pair’s average birth weight, we found positive associations between birth weight and adolescent vertical jump (b = 3.49, P = 0.0007) and arm pull (b = 3.44, P = 0.02). Δ scores were calculated within the twin pairs as first born twin minus second born twin. Δ birth weight was associated with Δ vertical jump within MZ twin pairs only (b = 2.63, P = 0.009), which indicates importance of placental factors. Conclusions We found evidence for an association between adolescent physical performance (strength, balance and possibly peak oxygen uptake) and birth weight. The associations with vertical jump and arm pull were likely based on individual, more specifically placental (in the case of vertical jump) factors. Our results should be viewed as hypothesis-generating and need confirmation, but potentially support preventive strategies to optimize birth weight, for example via placental function, to target later fitness and health
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