2,624 research outputs found

    Investigation of topographical stability of the concave and convex Self-Organizing Map variant

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    We investigate, by a systematic numerical study, the parameter dependence of the stability of the Kohonen Self-Organizing Map and the Zheng and Greenleaf concave and convex learning with respect to different input distributions, input and output dimensions

    Asymptotic Level Density of the Elastic Net Self-Organizing Feature Map

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    Whileas the Kohonen Self Organizing Map shows an asymptotic level density following a power law with a magnification exponent 2/3, it would be desired to have an exponent 1 in order to provide optimal mapping in the sense of information theory. In this paper, we study analytically and numerically the magnification behaviour of the Elastic Net algorithm as a model for self-organizing feature maps. In contrast to the Kohonen map the Elastic Net shows no power law, but for onedimensional maps nevertheless the density follows an universal magnification law, i.e. depends on the local stimulus density only and is independent on position and decouples from the stimulus density at other positions.Comment: 8 pages, 10 figures. Link to publisher under http://link.springer.de/link/service/series/0558/bibs/2415/24150939.ht

    Novel Approaches for the Ultrasonic NDE of Thick and other Composites

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    This paper summarizes several recent developments which are facilitating new approaches for both active and passive quantitative ultrasonic measurements in composite materials. These include the development of point sources and point receivers, a theory for analyzing the propagation of transient elastic waves through a bounded, dispersive and attenuative medium, and the development and implementation of appropriate signal processing algorithms. An alternative to these deterministic approaches is a processing scheme based on a simulated intelligent system which processes the signals like a neural network. Examples of applications of these ideas to the NDE of composite materials are shown

    The use of artificial neural networks to study fatty acids in neuropsychiatric disorders

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>The range of the fatty acids has been largely investigated in the plasma and erythrocytes of patients suffering from neuropsychiatric disorders. In this paper we investigate, for the first time, whether the study of the platelet fatty acids from such patients may be facilitated by means of artificial neural networks.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>Venous blood samples were taken from 84 patients with a DSM-IV-TR diagnosis of major depressive disorder and from 60 normal control subjects without a history of clinical depression. Platelet levels of the following 11 fatty acids were analyzed using one-way analysis of variance: C14:0, C16:0, C16:1, C18:0, C18:1 <it>n</it>-9, C18:1 <it>n</it>-7, C18:2 <it>n</it>-6, C18:3 <it>n</it>-3, C20:3 <it>n</it>-3, C20:4 <it>n</it>-6 and C22:6 <it>n</it>-3. The results were then entered into a wide variety of different artificial neural networks.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>All the artificial neural networks tested gave essentially the same result. However, one type of artificial neural network, the self-organizing map, gave superior information by allowing the results to be described in a two-dimensional plane with potentially informative border areas. A series of repeated and independent self-organizing map simulations, with the input parameters being changed each time, led to the finding that the best discriminant map was that obtained by inclusion of just three fatty acids.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Our results confirm that artificial neural networks may be used to analyze platelet fatty acids in neuropsychiatric disorder. Furthermore, they show that the self-organizing map, an unsupervised competitive-learning network algorithm which forms a nonlinear projection of a high-dimensional data manifold on a regular, low-dimensional grid, is an optimal type of artificial neural network to use for this task.</p

    Experimental Characterization of Ultrasonic Phenomena by a Neural-Like Learning System

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    This paper describes a novel approach for analyzing ultrasonic signals to permit an experimental determination of the relations between elastic wave phenomena and the properties of a source of sound in a material. It is demonstrated that an adaptive learning system comprising an associative memory can be used to map source and waveform data and vice versa with the auto- and cross-correlation portions of the associative memory. Experiments are described which utilize such an adaptive system, running on a laboratory minicomputer, to process the data from a transient ultrasonic pulse in a plate specimen. In the learning procedure, the system learns from experimental pattern vectors, which are formed from the ultrasonic waveforms and, in this paper, encoded information about the source. The source characteristics are recovered by the recall procedure from detected ultrasonic signals and vice versa. Furthermore, from the discrepancy between the presented and the learned signals, the changes in the wave phenomenon, corresponding, for example, to changes in the boundary conditions of a specimen, can be determined

    Visualization of dynamics using local dynamic modelling with self organizing maps

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    In this work, we describe a procedure to visualize nonlinear process dynamics using a self-organizing map based local model dynamical estimator. The proposed method exploits the topology preserving nature of the resulting estimator to extract visualizations (planes) of insightful dynamical features, that allow to explore nonlinear systems whose behavior changes with the operating point. Since the visualizations are obtained from a dynamical model of the process, measures on the goodness of this estimator (such as RMSE or AIC) are also applicable as a measure of the trustfulness of the visualizations. To illustrate the application of the proposed method, an experiment to analyze the dynamics of a nonlinear system on different operating points is include

    Internal Simulation of an Agent\u2019s Intentions

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    We present the Associative Self-Organizing Map (A-SOM) and propose that it could be used to predict an agent's intentions by internally simulating the behaviour likely to follow initial movements. The A-SOM is a neural network that develops a representation of its input space without supervision, while simultaneously learning to associate its activity with an arbitrary number of additional (possibly delayed) inputs. We argue that the A-SOM would be suitable for the prediction of the likely continuation of the perceived behaviour of an agent by learning to associate activity patterns over time, and thus a way to read its intentions

    Examples of Artificial Perceptions in Optical Character Recognition and Iris Recognition

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    This paper assumes the hypothesis that human learning is perception based, and consequently, the learning process and perceptions should not be represented and investigated independently or modeled in different simulation spaces. In order to keep the analogy between the artificial and human learning, the former is assumed here as being based on the artificial perception. Hence, instead of choosing to apply or develop a Computational Theory of (human) Perceptions, we choose to mirror the human perceptions in a numeric (computational) space as artificial perceptions and to analyze the interdependence between artificial learning and artificial perception in the same numeric space, using one of the simplest tools of Artificial Intelligence and Soft Computing, namely the perceptrons. As practical applications, we choose to work around two examples: Optical Character Recognition and Iris Recognition. In both cases a simple Turing test shows that artificial perceptions of the difference between two characters and between two irides are fuzzy, whereas the corresponding human perceptions are, in fact, crisp.Comment: 5th Int. Conf. on Soft Computing and Applications (Szeged, HU), 22-24 Aug 201

    Incremental context creation and its effects on semantic query precision

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    The final publication is available at Springer via http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-10543-2_19Proceedings of 4th International Conference on Semantic and Digital Media Technologies, SAMT 2009 Graz, Austria, December 2-4, 2009We briefly describe the results of an experimental study on the incremental creation of context out of the results of targeted queries, and discuss the increase in retrieval precision that results from the incremental enrichment of context.This work was supported in part by Consejería de Educación, Comunidad Autónoma de Madrid, under the grant CCG08-UAM/TIC/4303, Búsqueda basada en contexto como alternativa semántica al modelo ontológico. Simone Santini was in part supported by the Ramón y Cajal initiative of the Ministero de educación y ciencia. Alexandra Dumitrescu was in part supported by the European Social Fund, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid

    Soft topographic map for clustering and classification of bacteria

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    In this work a new method for clustering and building a topographic representation of a bacteria taxonomy is presented. The method is based on the analysis of stable parts of the genome, the so-called “housekeeping genes”. The proposed method generates topographic maps of the bacteria taxonomy, where relations among different type strains can be visually inspected and verified. Two well known DNA alignement algorithms are applied to the genomic sequences. Topographic maps are optimized to represent the similarity among the sequences according to their evolutionary distances. The experimental analysis is carried out on 147 type strains of the Gammaprotebacteria class by means of the 16S rRNA housekeeping gene. Complete sequences of the gene have been retrieved from the NCBI public database. In the experimental tests the maps show clusters of homologous type strains and present some singular cases potentially due to incorrect classification or erroneous annotations in the database
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