Catalogue Search | MBRL
Search Results Heading
Explore the vast range of titles available.
MBRLSearchResults
-
DisciplineDiscipline
-
Is Peer ReviewedIs Peer Reviewed
-
Item TypeItem Type
-
SubjectSubject
-
YearFrom:-To:
-
More FiltersMore FiltersSourceLanguage
Done
Filters
Reset
85
result(s) for
"X Learning strategies"
Sort by:
Putting Two and Two Together: Middle School Students' Morphological Problem-Solving Strategies For Unknown Words
2013
Adolescents often use root word and affix knowledge to figure out unknown words. Anglin (1993) found that younger readers favor the Part-to-Whole strategy, and Tyler and Nagy (1989) confirmed the importance of root-word knowledge for middle school students. This study seeks to understand the different strategies middle school readers use so that teachers can leverage these approaches in future morphological instruction. The authors interviewed 20 seventh- and eighth-grade students from two middle schools in the Southeastern United States. Males and females were represented evenly across sites. They chose these two schools because each served populations of either proficient or struggling readers and could showcase the problem-solving strategies used by these different groups of readers. Study data were collected through 20-minute interviews led by the authors of this article. Students were asked to problem solve 12 morphologically complex words, with follow-up questions about their problem-solving processes. Because they focused on how students might use morphology beyond orthography and phonology, when students mispronounced a word, the interviewer gave them the correct pronunciation. Based on their findings, the authors discuss strategies and make instructional recommendations to support students in determining word meanings. The article concludes that although only part of comprehensive vocabulary instruction, morphological problem-solving strategies can be powerful tools in a student's literacy tool belt. Their analysis suggests students use sophisticated strategies when trying to figure out the meanings of morphologically complex words. (Contains 6 figures and 3 tables.)
Journal Article
LDDNet: A Deep Learning Framework for the Diagnosis of Infectious Lung Diseases
by
Mondal, M. Rubaiyat Hossain
,
Hasan, Md Junayed
,
Maliha, Azra
in
Algorithms
,
Bacterial pneumonia
,
Connecticut
2023
This paper proposes a new deep learning (DL) framework for the analysis of lung diseases, including COVID-19 and pneumonia, from chest CT scans and X-ray (CXR) images. This framework is termed optimized DenseNet201 for lung diseases (LDDNet). The proposed LDDNet was developed using additional layers of 2D global average pooling, dense and dropout layers, and batch normalization to the base DenseNet201 model. There are 1024 Relu-activated dense layers and 256 dense layers using the sigmoid activation method. The hyper-parameters of the model, including the learning rate, batch size, epochs, and dropout rate, were tuned for the model. Next, three datasets of lung diseases were formed from separate open-access sources. One was a CT scan dataset containing 1043 images. Two X-ray datasets comprising images of COVID-19-affected lungs, pneumonia-affected lungs, and healthy lungs exist, with one being an imbalanced dataset with 5935 images and the other being a balanced dataset with 5002 images. The performance of each model was analyzed using the Adam, Nadam, and SGD optimizers. The best results have been obtained for both the CT scan and CXR datasets using the Nadam optimizer. For the CT scan images, LDDNet showed a COVID-19-positive classification accuracy of 99.36%, a 100% precision recall of 98%, and an F1 score of 99%. For the X-ray dataset of 5935 images, LDDNet provides a 99.55% accuracy, 73% recall, 100% precision, and 85% F1 score using the Nadam optimizer in detecting COVID-19-affected patients. For the balanced X-ray dataset, LDDNet provides a 97.07% classification accuracy. For a given set of parameters, the performance results of LDDNet are better than the existing algorithms of ResNet152V2 and XceptionNet.
Journal Article
Protein Structure Prediction: Conventional and Deep Learning Perspectives
2021
Protein structure prediction is a way to bridge the sequence-structure gap, one of the main challenges in computational biology and chemistry. Predicting any protein's accurate structure is of paramount importance for the scientific community, as these structures govern their function. Moreover, this is one of the complicated optimization problems that computational biologists have ever faced. Experimental protein structure determination methods include X-ray crystallography, Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy and Electron Microscopy. All of these are tedious and time-consuming procedures that require expertise. To make the process less cumbersome, scientists use predictive tools as part of computational methods, using data consolidated in the protein repositories. In recent years, machine learning approaches have raised the interest of the structure prediction community. Most of the machine learning approaches for protein structure prediction are centred on co-evolution based methods. The accuracy of these approaches depends on the number of homologous protein sequences available in the databases. The prediction problem becomes challenging for many proteins, especially those without enough sequence homologs. Deep learning methods allow for the extraction of intricate features from protein sequence data without making any intuitions. Accurately predicted protein structures are employed for drug discovery, antibody designs, understanding protein–protein interactions, and interactions with other molecules. This article provides a review of conventional and deep learning approaches in protein structure prediction. We conclude this review by outlining a few publicly available datasets and deep learning architectures currently employed for protein structure prediction tasks.
Journal Article
Big data analysis for Covid-19 in hospital information systems
2024
The COVID-19 pandemic has triggered a global public health crisis, affecting hundreds of countries. With the increasing number of infected cases, developing automated COVID-19 identification tools based on CT images can effectively assist clinical diagnosis and reduce the tedious workload of image interpretation. To expand the dataset for machine learning methods, it is necessary to aggregate cases from different medical systems to learn robust and generalizable models. This paper proposes a novel deep learning joint framework that can effectively handle heterogeneous datasets with distribution discrepancies for accurate COVID-19 identification. We address the cross-site domain shift by redesigning the COVID-Net’s network architecture and learning strategy, and independent feature normalization in latent space to improve prediction accuracy and learning efficiency. Additionally, we propose using a contrastive training objective to enhance the domain invariance of semantic embeddings and boost classification performance on each dataset. We develop and evaluate our method with two large-scale public COVID-19 diagnosis datasets containing CT images. Extensive experiments show that our method consistently improves the performance both datasets, outperforming the original COVID-Net trained on each dataset by 13.27% and 15.15% in AUC respectively, also exceeding existing state-of-the-art multi-site learning methods.
Journal Article
Detection and visualization of abnormality in chest radiographs using modality-specific convolutional neural network ensembles
by
Rajaraman, Sivaramakrishnan
,
Antani, Sameer K.
,
Kim, Incheol
in
Accuracy
,
Algorithms
,
Analysis
2020
Convolutional neural networks (CNNs) trained on natural images are extremely successful in image classification and localization due to superior automated feature extraction capability. In extending their use to biomedical recognition tasks, it is important to note that visual features of medical images tend to be uniquely different than natural images. There are advantages offered through training these networks on large scale medical common modality image collections pertaining to the recognition task. Further, improved generalization in transferring knowledge across similar tasks is possible when the models are trained to learn modality-specific features and then suitably repurposed for the target task. In this study, we propose modality-specific ensemble learning toward improving abnormality detection in chest X-rays (CXRs). CNN models are trained on a large-scale CXR collection to learn modality-specific features and then repurposed for detecting and localizing abnormalities. Model predictions are combined using different ensemble strategies toward reducing prediction variance and sensitivity to the training data while improving overall performance and generalization. Class-selective relevance mapping (CRM) is used to visualize the learned behavior of the individual models and their ensembles. It localizes discriminative regions of interest (ROIs) showing abnormal regions and offers an improved explanation of model predictions. It was observed that the model ensembles demonstrate superior localization performance in terms of Intersection of Union (IoU) and mean Average Precision (mAP) metrics than any individual constituent model.
Journal Article
Artificial Intelligence-enabled Chest X-ray Classifies Osteoporosis and Identifies Mortality Risk
2024
A deep learning model was developed to identify osteoporosis from chest X-ray (CXR) features with high accuracy in internal and external validation. It has significant prognostic implications, identifying individuals at higher risk of all-cause mortality. This Artificial Intelligence (AI)-enabled CXR strategy may function as an early detection screening tool for osteoporosis. The aim of this study was to develop a deep learning model (DLM) to identify osteoporosis via CXR features and investigate the performance and clinical implications. This study collected 48,353 CXRs with the corresponding T score according to Dual energy X-ray Absorptiometry (DXA) from the academic medical center. Among these, 35,633 CXRs were used to identify CXR- Osteoporosis (CXR-OP). Another 12,720 CXRs were used to validate the performance, which was evaluated by the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC). Furthermore, CXR-OP was tested to assess the long-term risks of mortality, which were evaluated by Kaplan‒Meier survival analysis and the Cox proportional hazards model. The DLM utilizing CXR achieved AUCs of 0.930 and 0.892 during internal and external validation, respectively. The group that underwent DXA with CXR-OP had a higher risk of all-cause mortality (hazard ratio [HR] 2.59, 95% CI: 1.83–3.67), and those classified as CXR-OP in the group without DXA also had higher all-cause mortality (HR: 1.67, 95% CI: 1.61–1.72) in the internal validation set. The external validation set produced similar results. Our DLM uses CXRs for early detection of osteoporosis, aiding physicians to identify those at risk. It has significant prognostic implications, improving life quality and reducing mortality. AI-enabled CXR strategy may serve as a screening tool.
Journal Article
Computer-Aided Diagnosis of Coal Workers’ Pneumoconiosis in Chest X-ray Radiographs Using Machine Learning: A Systematic Literature Review
by
Luo, Suhuai
,
Wang, Dadong
,
Shaukat, Kamran
in
Anthracosis - diagnostic imaging
,
Artificial intelligence
,
Classification
2022
Computer-aided diagnostic (CAD) systems can assist radiologists in detecting coal workers’ pneumoconiosis (CWP) in their chest X-rays. Early diagnosis of the CWP can significantly improve workers’ survival rate. The development of the CAD systems will reduce risk in the workplace and improve the quality of chest screening for CWP diseases. This systematic literature review (SLR) amis to categorise and summarise the feature extraction and detection approaches of computer-based analysis in CWP using chest X-ray radiographs (CXR). We conducted the SLR method through 11 databases that focus on science, engineering, medicine, health, and clinical studies. The proposed SLR identified and compared 40 articles from the last 5 decades, covering three main categories of computer-based CWP detection: classical handcrafted features-based image analysis, traditional machine learning, and deep learning-based methods. Limitations of this review and future improvement of the review are also discussed.
Journal Article
Ensemble-based multiclass lung cancer classification using hybrid CNN-SVD feature extraction and selection method
by
Ahsan, Mominul
,
Haider, Julfikar
,
Mollah, Md. Aslam
in
Accuracy
,
Algorithms
,
Artificial intelligence
2025
Lung cancer (LC) is a leading cause of cancer-related fatalities worldwide, underscoring the urgency of early detection for improved patient outcomes. The main objective of this research is to harness the noble strategies of artificial intelligence for identifying and classifying lung cancers more precisely from CT scan images at the early stage. This study introduces a novel lung cancer detection method, which was mainly focused on Convolutional Neural Networks (CNN) and was later customized for binary and multiclass classification utilizing a publicly available dataset of chest CT scan images of lung cancer. The main contribution of this research lies in its use of a hybrid CNN-SVD (Singular Value Decomposition) method and the use of a robust voting ensemble approach, which results in superior accuracy and effectiveness for mitigating potential errors. By employing contrast-limited adaptive histogram equalization (CLAHE), contrast-enhanced images were generated with minimal noise and prominent distinctive features. Subsequently, a CNN-SVD-Ensemble model was implemented to extract important features and reduce dimensionality. The extracted features were then processed by a set of ML algorithms along with a voting ensemble approach. Additionally, Gradient-weighted Class Activation Mapping (Grad-CAM) was integrated as an explainable AI (XAI) technique for enhancing model transparency by highlighting key influencing regions in the CT scans, which improved interpretability and ensured reliable and trustworthy results for clinical applications. This research offered state-of-the-art results, which achieved remarkable performance metrics with an accuracy, AUC, precision, recall, F1 score, Cohen’s Kappa and Matthews Correlation Coefficient (MCC) of 99.49%, 99.73%, 100%, 99%, 99%, 99.15% and 99.16%, respectively, addressing the prior research gaps and setting a new benchmark in the field. Furthermore, in binary class classification, all the performance indicators attained a perfect score of 100%. The robustness of the suggested approach offered more reliable and impactful insights in the medical field, thus improving existing knowledge and setting the stage for future innovations.
Journal Article
An Intelligent Sensor Based Decision Support System for Diagnosing Pulmonary Ailment through Standardized Chest X-ray Scans
2022
Academics and the health community are paying much attention to developing smart remote patient monitoring, sensors, and healthcare technology. For the analysis of medical scans, various studies integrate sophisticated deep learning strategies. A smart monitoring system is needed as a proactive diagnostic solution that may be employed in an epidemiological scenario such as COVID-19. Consequently, this work offers an intelligent medicare system that is an IoT-empowered, deep learning-based decision support system (DSS) for the automated detection and categorization of infectious diseases (COVID-19 and pneumothorax). The proposed DSS system was evaluated using three independent standard-based chest X-ray scans. The suggested DSS predictor has been used to identify and classify areas on whole X-ray scans with abnormalities thought to be attributable to COVID-19, reaching an identification and classification accuracy rate of 89.58% for normal images and 89.13% for COVID-19 and pneumothorax. With the suggested DSS system, a judgment depending on individual chest X-ray scans may be made in approximately 0.01 s. As a result, the DSS system described in this study can forecast at a pace of 95 frames per second (FPS) for both models, which is near to real-time.
Journal Article
Analysis of Perceptual Expertise in Radiology – Current Knowledge and a New Perspective
2019
Radiologists rely principally on visual inspection to detect, describe, and classify findings in medical images. As most interpretive errors in radiology are perceptual in nature, understanding the path to radiologic expertise during image analysis is essential to educate future generations of radiologists. We review the perceptual tasks and challenges in radiologic diagnosis, discuss models of radiologic image perception, consider the application of perceptual learning methods in medical training, and suggest a new approach to understanding perceptional expertise. Specific principled enhancements to educational practices in radiology promise to deepen perceptual expertise among radiologists with the goal of improving training and reducing medical error.
Journal Article