92 research outputs found
Crowdsensing-based Road Damage Detection Challenge (CRDDC-2022)
This paper summarizes the Crowdsensing-based Road Damage Detection Challenge
(CRDDC), a Big Data Cup organized as a part of the IEEE International
Conference on Big Data'2022. The Big Data Cup challenges involve a released
dataset and a well-defined problem with clear evaluation metrics. The
challenges run on a data competition platform that maintains a real-time online
evaluation system for the participants. In the presented case, the data
constitute 47,420 road images collected from India, Japan, the Czech Republic,
Norway, the United States, and China to propose methods for automatically
detecting road damages in these countries. More than 60 teams from 19 countries
registered for this competition. The submitted solutions were evaluated using
five leaderboards based on performance for unseen test images from the
aforementioned six countries. This paper encapsulates the top 11 solutions
proposed by these teams. The best-performing model utilizes ensemble learning
based on YOLO and Faster-RCNN series models to yield an F1 score of 76% for
test data combined from all 6 countries. The paper concludes with a comparison
of current and past challenges and provides direction for the future.Comment: 9 pages 2 figures 5 tables. arXiv admin note: text overlap with
arXiv:2011.0874
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The Development of Japanese City\u27s Future Simulation System: My City Forecast
In recent years, the optimization of urban management due to the rapid population decline has been one of the major issues in Japan. Future population estimation and related statistical information, such as the location information of the public facility is now available to open. However, open data utilization in the urban planning field is not advanced in comparison with other countries. We constructed the Web system using FOSS4G that citizens can be the future image of the city to operate on their own. It used mainly below FOSS4G tools; OpenLayers, PostGIS, Pgrouting and Geocolor. The collected data calculated in advance, and the default mode for displaying a simulation result in the 500m mesh unit. In addition to there is a customized mode to be re-calculated using the geodata that citizen is uploading open geospatial data. In the customization mode, to choose the residence induction region arbitrarily, it is possible to more detailed simulation by inputting the future urban areas. We also held a workshop for Japanese citizens the variety of stakeholders, it was also able to get feedback on the functional requirements.For the ordinary citizens are not familiar with GIS, to be able to display an easy-to-understand the future of the region have been evaluated. However, also revealed that the operation of the customized version feels as difficult to use, such as difficult legend of adjustment
High-Resolution Near-Infrared Imaging of the Powerful Radio Galaxy 3C 324 at z = 1.21 with the Subaru Telescope
We have obtained high-resolution K'-band images of the powerful z=1.206 radio
galaxy 3C 324 with the Subaru telescope under seeing conditions of 0.3--0.4
arcsec. We clearly resolved the galaxy and directly compared it to the optical
images obtained with the Hubble Space Telescope. The host galaxy of 3C 324 is
revealed to be a moderately luminous elliptical galaxy with a smooth light
profile. The effective radius of the galaxy, as determined by profile fitting,
is 1.3+-0.1 arcsec (1.2 kpc), which is significantly smaller than the value of
2.2 arcsec, published in Best et al. (1998, MNRAS, 292, 758). The peak of the
K'-band light coincides with the position of the radio core, which implies that
the powerful AGN lies at the nucleus of the host galaxy. The peak also
coincides with the gap in the optical knotty structures which may be a dust
lane hiding the UV-optical emission of the AGN from our line of sight; it is
very likely that we are seeing the obscuring structure almost edge-on. We
clearly detected the `aligned component' in the K'-band image by subtracting a
model elliptical galaxy from the observed image. The red R_F702W-K color of the
outer region of the galaxy avoiding the aligned component indicates that the
near infrared light of the host galaxy is dominated by an old stellar
population.Comment: 21 pages (10 figures), accepted for publication in PAS
Current Performance and On-Going Improvements of the 8.2 m Subaru Telescope
An overview of the current status of the 8.2 m Subaru Telescope constructed
and operated at Mauna Kea, Hawaii, by the National Astronomical Observatory of
Japan is presented. The basic design concept and the verified performance of
the telescope system are described. Also given are the status of the instrument
package offered to the astronomical community, the status of operation, and
some of the future plans. The status of the telescope reported in a number of
SPIE papers as of the summer of 2002 are incorporated with some updates
included as of 2004 February. However, readers are encouraged to check the most
updated status of the telescope through the home page,
http://subarutelescope.org/index.html, and/or the direct contact with the
observatory staff.Comment: 18 pages (17 pages in published version), 29 figures (GIF format),
This is the version before the galley proo
Chemoradiotherapy with 3-weekly CDDP 80 mg/m2 for head and neck squamous cell carcinoma: 5-year survival data from a phase 2 study
ObjectiveThe global standard for chemoradiation therapy (CCRT) for head and neck squamous cell carcinoma is cisplatin 100 mg/m2 administered once every three weeks, although cisplatin 80 mg/m2 is also widely used as an alternative treatment to reduce adverse events in Japan. We aimed to assess the long-term survival outcomes and late adverse events associated with CCRT with a 3-weekly cisplatin dose of 80 mg/m2.MethodsA phase 2 study on CCRT with a 3-weekly cisplatin dose of 80 mg/m2 was performed in 47 patients between April 2015 and December 2016 at four centers in Japan. Survival outcomes and late adverse events at 5 years after this phase 2 trial were investigated.ResultsThe median follow-up period was 61 months. The 5-year progression-free survival/overall survival of all 47 patients was 66.0%/76.6%, while that of patients with stage III, IV disease (UICC) was 65.6%/71.9%. Seventeen patients (36%) experienced dysphagia as a late adverse event. Univariate and multivariate analyses revealed a significant association between acute mucositis/low body mass index (BMI) during CCRT and late dysphagia.ConclusionThe survival outcomes of CCRT with a 3-weekly cisplatin dose of 80 mg/m2 may be comparable to the previously reported dose of 100 mg/m2. Acute mucositis and low BMI at CCRT were risk factors for late dysphagia, indicating the importance of managing these conditions during CCRT to prevent late adverse events. Caution and care for acute mucositis and swallowing training in patients with low BMI may be important for preventing late-stage dysphagia
Cost-effectiveness of gargling for the prevention of upper respiratory tract infections
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>In Japan, gargling is a generally accepted way of preventing upper respiratory tract infection (URTI). The effectiveness of gargling for preventing URTI has been shown in a randomized controlled trial that compared incidences of URTI between gargling and control groups. From the perspective of the third-party payer, gargling is dominant due to the fact that the costs of gargling are borne by the participant. However, the cost-effectiveness of gargling from a societal perspective should be considered. In this study, economic evaluation alongside a randomized controlled trial was performed to evaluate the cost-effectiveness of gargling for preventing URTI from a societal perspective.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>Among participants in the gargling trial, 122 water-gargling and 130 control subjects were involved in the economic analysis. Sixty-day cumulative follow-up costs and effectiveness measured by quality-adjusted life days (QALD) were compared between groups on an intention-to-treat basis. Incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER) was converted to dollars per quality-adjusted life years (QALY). The 95% confidence interval (95%CI) and probability of gargling being cost-effective were estimated by bootstrapping.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>After 60 days, QALD was increased by 0.43 and costs were 31,800/QALY (95%CI, 248,100). Although this resembles many acceptable forms of medical intervention, including URTI preventive measures such as influenza vaccination, the broad confidence interval indicates uncertainty surrounding our results. In addition, one-way sensitivity analysis also indicated that careful evaluation is required for the cost of gargling and the utility of moderate URTI. The major limitation of this study was that this trial was conducted in winter, at a time when URTI is prevalent. Care must be taken when applying the results to a season when URTI is not prevalent, since the ICER will increase due to decreases in incidence.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>This study suggests gargling as a cost-effective preventive strategy for URTI that is acceptable from perspectives of both the third-party payer and society.</p
Design of cadmium-free colloidal II–VI semiconductor quantum dots exhibiting RGB emission
The size and composition dependence of the optical gap of colloidal alloyed quantum dots (QDs) of Zn(Te1−xSex) and Zn(Te1−xSx) were calculated by the finite-depth-well effective mass approximation method. QDs that exhibited red, green and blue emission were explored to develop cadmium-free II–VI chalcogenide-based QD-phosphors. We considered that highly monodisperse colloidal QDs with diameters of 3–6 nm are easy to synthesize and II–VI semiconductor QDs usually exhibit a Stokes shift ranging between 50 and 150 meV. We showed that Zn(Te1−xSex) QDs with 0.02≤x≤0.68, and 0≤x≤0.06, and 0.66≤x≤0.9 may be expected to exhibit green, and blue emission, respectively. Zn(Te1−xSx) QDs with 0.26≤x≤0.37, 0.01≤x≤0.2 and 0.45≤x≤0.61, 0≤x≤0.02, and 0.63≤x≤0.72, should give red, green and blue emission respectively. On the basis of our calculations, we showed that Zn(Te,Se) and Zn(Te,S) QDs are very promising cadmium-free II-VI chalcogenide semiconductor QD phosphors
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