Lamb wave feature extraction using discrete wavelet transformation and Principal Component Analysis

Author(s):  
Mojtaba Ghodsi ◽  
Hamidreza Ziaiefar ◽  
Milad Amiryan ◽  
Farhang Honarvar ◽  
Yousef Hojjat ◽  
...  
Author(s):  
Maryam Abedini ◽  
Horriyeh Haddad ◽  
Marzieh Faridi Masouleh ◽  
Asadollah Shahbahrami

This study proposes an image denoising algorithm based on sparse representation and Principal Component Analysis (PCA). The proposed algorithm includes the following steps. First, the noisy image is divided into overlapped [Formula: see text] blocks. Second, the discrete cosine transform is applied as a dictionary for the sparse representation of the vectors created by the overlapped blocks. To calculate the sparse vector, the orthogonal matching pursuit algorithm is used. Then, the dictionary is updated by means of the PCA algorithm to achieve the sparsest representation of vectors. Since the signal energy, unlike the noise energy, is concentrated on a small dataset by transforming into the PCA domain, the signal and noise can be well distinguished. The proposed algorithm was implemented in a MATLAB environment and its performance was evaluated on some standard grayscale images under different levels of standard deviations of white Gaussian noise by means of peak signal-to-noise ratio, structural similarity indexes, and visual effects. The experimental results demonstrate that the proposed denoising algorithm achieves significant improvement compared to dual-tree complex discrete wavelet transform and K-singular value decomposition image denoising methods. It also obtains competitive results with the block-matching and 3D filtering method, which is the current state-of-the-art for image denoising.


Polymers ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (23) ◽  
pp. 4117
Author(s):  
Y-h. Taguchi ◽  
Turki Turki

The development of the medical applications for substances or materials that contact cells is important. Hence, it is necessary to elucidate how substances that surround cells affect gene expression during incubation. In the current study, we compared the gene expression profiles of cell lines that were in contact with collagen–glycosaminoglycan mesh and control cells. Principal component analysis-based unsupervised feature extraction was applied to identify genes with altered expression during incubation in the treated cell lines but not in the controls. The identified genes were enriched in various biological terms. Our method also outperformed a conventional methodology, namely, gene selection based on linear regression with time course.


Author(s):  
Y-H. Taguchi ◽  
Mitsuo Iwadate ◽  
Hideaki Umeyama ◽  
Yoshiki Murakami ◽  
Akira Okamoto

Feature Extraction (FE) is a difficult task when the number of features is much larger than the number of samples, although that is a typical situation when biological (big) data is analyzed. This is especially true when FE is stable, independent of the samples considered (stable FE), and is often required. However, the stability of FE has not been considered seriously. In this chapter, the authors demonstrate that Principal Component Analysis (PCA)-based unsupervised FE functions as stable FE. Three bioinformatics applications of PCA-based unsupervised FE—detection of aberrant DNA methylation associated with diseases, biomarker identification using circulating microRNA, and proteomic analysis of bacterial culturing processes—are discussed.


Author(s):  
Mohsen Moshki ◽  
Mehran Garmehi ◽  
Peyman Kabiri

In this chapter, application of Principal Component Analysis (PCA) and one of its extensions on intrusion detection is investigated. This extended version of PCA is modified to cover an important shortcoming of traditional PCA. In order to evaluate these modifications, it is mathematically proved that these modifications are beneficial and later on a known dataset such as the DARPA99 dataset is used to verify results experimentally. To verify this approach, initially the traditional PCA is used to preprocess the dataset. Later on, using a simple classifier such as KNN, the effectiveness of the multiclass classification is studied. In the reported work, instead of traditional PCA, a revised version of PCA named Weighted PCA (WPCA) will be used for feature extraction. The results from applying the aforementioned method to the DARPA99 dataset show that this approach results in better accuracy than the traditional PCA when a number of features are limited, a number of classes are large, and a population of classes is unbalanced. In some situations WPCA outperforms traditional PCA by more than 1% in accuracy.


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