A Machine Learning-based Neural Implant Front End for Inducing Naturalistic Firing

Author(s):  
Cynthia R. Steinhardt ◽  
Gene Y. Fridman
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jinhui Yu ◽  
Xinyu Luan ◽  
Yu Sun

Because of the differences in the structure and content of each website, it is often difficult for international applicants to obtain the application information of each school in time. They need to spend a lot of time manually collecting and sorting information. Especially when the information of the school may be constantly updated, the information may become very inaccurate for international applicants. we designed a tool including three main steps to solve the problem: crawling links, processing web pages, and building my pages. In compiling languages, we mainly use Python and store the crawled data in JSON format [4]. In the process of crawling links, we mainly used beautiful soup to parse HTML and designed crawler. In this paper, we use Python language to design a system. First, we use the crawler method to fetch all the links related to the admission information on the school's official website. Then we traverse these links, and use the noise_remove [5] method to process their corresponding page contents, so as to further narrow the scope of effective information and save these processed contents in the JSON files. Finally, we use the Flask framework to integrate these contents into my front-end page conveniently and efficiently, so that it has the complete function of integrating and displaying information.


Author(s):  
Gustavo Assunção ◽  
Paulo Menezes ◽  
Fernando Perdigão

<div class="page" title="Page 1"><div class="layoutArea"><div class="column"><p><span>The idea of recognizing human emotion through speech (SER) has recently received considerable attention from the research community, mostly due to the current machine learning trend. Nevertheless, even the most successful methods are still rather lacking in terms of adaptation to specific speakers and scenarios, evidently reducing their performance when compared to humans. In this paper, we evaluate a largescale machine learning model for classification of emotional states. This model has been trained for speaker iden- tification but is instead used here as a front-end for extracting robust features from emotional speech. We aim to verify that SER improves when some speak- er</span><span>’</span><span>s emotional prosody cues are considered. Experiments using various state-of- the-art classifiers are carried out, using the Weka software, so as to evaluate the robustness of the extracted features. Considerable improvement is observed when comparing our results with other SER state-of-the-art techniques.</span></p></div></div></div>


2021 ◽  
pp. 77-97
Author(s):  
Aitor Apaolaza ◽  
Tobias Backes ◽  
Sabine Barthold ◽  
Irina Bienia ◽  
Till Blume ◽  
...  

AbstractIn this paper, we present an overview of the MOVING platform, a user-driven approach that enables young researchers, decision makers, and public administrators to use machine learning and data mining tools to search, organize, and manage large-scale information sources on the web such as scientific publications, videos of research talks, and social media. In order to provide a concise overview of the platform, we focus on its front end, which is the MOVING web application. By presenting the main components of the web application, we illustrate what functionalities and capabilities the platform offer its end-users, rather than delving into the data analysis and machine learning technologies that make these functionalities possible.


2019 ◽  
Vol 1 ◽  
pp. 1-2
Author(s):  
Jan Wilkening

<p><strong>Abstract.</strong> Data is regarded as the oil of the 21st century, and the concept of data science has received increasing attention in the last years. These trends are mainly caused by the rise of big data &amp;ndash; data that is big in terms of volume, variety and velocity. Consequently, data scientists are required to make sense of these large datasets. Companies have problems acquiring talented people to solve data science problems. This is not surprising, as employers often expect skillsets that can hardly be found in one person: Not only does a data scientist need to have a solid background in machine learning, statistics and various programming languages, but often also in IT systems architecture, databases, complex mathematics. Above all, she should have a strong non-technical domain expertise in her field (see Figure 1).</p><p>As it is widely accepted that 80% of data has a spatial component, developments in data science could provide exciting new opportunities for GIS and cartography: Cartographers are experts in spatial data visualization, and often also very skilled in statistics, data pre-processing and analysis in general. The cartographers’ skill levels often depend on the degree to which cartography programs at universities focus on the “front end” (visualisation) of a spatial data and leave the “back end” (modelling, gathering, processing, analysis) to GIScientists. In many university curricula, these front-end and back-end distinctions between cartographers and GIScientists are not clearly defined, and the boundaries are somewhat blurred.</p><p>In order to become good data scientists, cartographers and GIScientists need to acquire certain additional skills that are often beyond their university curricula. These skills include programming, machine learning and data mining. These are important technologies for extracting knowledge big spatial data sets, and thereby the logical advancement to “traditional” geoprocessing, which focuses on “traditional” (small, structured, static) datasets such shapefiles or feature classes.</p><p>To bridge the gap between spatial sciences (such as GIS and cartography) and data science, we need an integrated framework of “spatial data science” (Figure 2).</p><p>Spatial sciences focus on causality, theory-based approaches to explain why things are happening in space. In contrast, the scope of data science is to find similar patterns in big datasets with techniques of machine learning and data mining &amp;ndash; often without considering spatial concepts (such as topology, spatial indexing, spatial autocorrelation, modifiable area unit problems, map projections and coordinate systems, uncertainty in measurement etc.).</p><p>Spatial data science could become the core competency of GIScientists and cartographers who are willing to integrate methods from the data science knowledge stack. Moreover, data scientists could enhance their work by integrating important spatial concepts and tools from GIS and cartography into data science workflows. A non-exhaustive knowledge stack for spatial data scientists, including typical tasks and tools, is given in Table 1.</p><p>There are many interesting ongoing projects at the interface of spatial and data science. Examples from the ArcGIS platform include:</p><ul><li>Integration of Python GIS APIs with Machine Learning libraries, such as scikit-learn or TensorFlow, in Jupyter Notebooks</li><li>Combination of R (advanced statistics and visualization) and GIS (basic geoprocessing, mapping) in ModelBuilder and other automatization frameworks</li><li>Enterprise GIS solutions for distributed geoprocessing operations on big, real-time vector and raster datasets</li><li>Dashboards for visualizing real-time sensor data and integrating it with other data sources</li><li>Applications for interactive data exploration</li><li>GIS tools for Machine Learning tasks for prediction, clustering and classification of spatial data</li><li>GIS Integration for Hadoop</li></ul><p>While the discussion about proprietary (ArcGIS) vs. open-source (QGIS) software is beyond the scope of this article, it has to be stated that a.) many ArcGIS projects are actually open-source and b.) using a complete GIS platform instead of several open-source pieces has several advantages, particularly in efficiency, maintenance and support (see Wilkening et al. (2019) for a more detailed consideration). At any rate, cartography and GIS tools are the essential technology blocks for solving the (80% spatial) data science problems of the future.</p>


2018 ◽  
Vol 7 (4.10) ◽  
pp. 46
Author(s):  
Nanda Kishor Panda ◽  
Shubham Bhardwaj ◽  
H. Bharadwaj ◽  
Rohil Singhvi

Internet of Things (IOT) is a development of the internet which plays a  major role in integrating human-machine interaction by allowing everyday objects to send and receive data in a variety of applications. Using IOT in healthcare monitoring provides an avenue for doctors and patients to interact and to track the dosage of medication administered. The paper presents an interactive, user friendly network integrated with an automated medicine dispenser which uses IOT, cloud computing and machine learning. The network was built on a python tornado framework with a front end developed using materialise CSS. The feasibility of this approach was validated by building a prototype and conducting a survey.  


Author(s):  
Anand Kumar

In our everyday life we go over numerous individuals who are experiencing some sort of Diseases. Prediction of disease is an integral part of treatment. In this project the disease is accurately predicted by looking at the symptoms of the patient where the patient can input his/her symptom and the system will predict the disease patient is suffering from. Classification Algorithms like the Naïve Bayes (NB), Random Forest, Logistic Regression and KNN have been broadly utilized to anticipate the Disease, where different accuracies were obtained. In corresponding to a particular Disease, for example, Heart Disease, Diabetes and so on is additionally anticipated by demonstrating “True” or “False” i.e. if an individual is having or not having that Disease. Prediction of such a system can have a very large potential in the medical treatment of the future. Once the Disease is predicted by the system, It then recommends which type of doctor to consult. In this paper, an audit of some new works identified with utilization of Machine Learning in expectation of disease is predicted. An interactive interface is built as front-end to facilitate interaction with the symptoms. The whole model is implemented using Django and is connected to the Django Server.


Author(s):  
Pere L. Gilabert ◽  
David López‐Bueno ◽  
Thi Quynh Anh Pham ◽  
Gabriel Montoro
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