scholarly journals Machine learning classifiers provide insight into the relationship between microbial communities and bacterial vaginosis

2015 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel Beck ◽  
James A. Foster
Author(s):  
Adam Morrone ◽  
Wes Anderson ◽  
Steven J. Simske

A novel method is presented for evaluating the efficacy of object recognition algorithms on occluded images, called the occluded image function (OIF). The OIF describes system behavior in occluded environments and thus gives qualitative insight into their mechanisms; derivative metrics from OIF can also be used to quantitatively compare classifiers. To showcase the utility of the OIF, an experiment is performed by obstructing optical gait images from two biped robot models and using four binary machine learning classifiers to distinguish between them. The OIF diagrams are created from each experiment, and the resulting insights about the classifiers are discussed. Using the OIF, it is shown that the primitive classifiers can sometimes perform better under occlusion conditions, possibly due to pre-filtering of gait data by uniform occlusions. This result serves to demonstrate that the OIF is a useful tool for classifier evaluation.


2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (8) ◽  
pp. 1433
Author(s):  
Shobitha Shetty ◽  
Prasun Kumar Gupta ◽  
Mariana Belgiu ◽  
S. K. Srivastav

Machine learning classifiers are being increasingly used nowadays for Land Use and Land Cover (LULC) mapping from remote sensing images. However, arriving at the right choice of classifier requires understanding the main factors influencing their performance. The present study investigated firstly the effect of training sampling design on the classification results obtained by Random Forest (RF) classifier and, secondly, it compared its performance with other machine learning classifiers for LULC mapping using multi-temporal satellite remote sensing data and the Google Earth Engine (GEE) platform. We evaluated the impact of three sampling methods, namely Stratified Equal Random Sampling (SRS(Eq)), Stratified Proportional Random Sampling (SRS(Prop)), and Stratified Systematic Sampling (SSS) upon the classification results obtained by the RF trained LULC model. Our results showed that the SRS(Prop) method favors major classes while achieving good overall accuracy. The SRS(Eq) method provides good class-level accuracies, even for minority classes, whereas the SSS method performs well for areas with large intra-class variability. Toward evaluating the performance of machine learning classifiers, RF outperformed Classification and Regression Trees (CART), Support Vector Machine (SVM), and Relevance Vector Machine (RVM) with a >95% confidence level. The performance of CART and SVM classifiers were found to be similar. RVM achieved good classification results with a limited number of training samples.


Author(s):  
Chunyan Ji ◽  
Thosini Bamunu Mudiyanselage ◽  
Yutong Gao ◽  
Yi Pan

AbstractThis paper reviews recent research works in infant cry signal analysis and classification tasks. A broad range of literatures are reviewed mainly from the aspects of data acquisition, cross domain signal processing techniques, and machine learning classification methods. We introduce pre-processing approaches and describe a diversity of features such as MFCC, spectrogram, and fundamental frequency, etc. Both acoustic features and prosodic features extracted from different domains can discriminate frame-based signals from one another and can be used to train machine learning classifiers. Together with traditional machine learning classifiers such as KNN, SVM, and GMM, newly developed neural network architectures such as CNN and RNN are applied in infant cry research. We present some significant experimental results on pathological cry identification, cry reason classification, and cry sound detection with some typical databases. This survey systematically studies the previous research in all relevant areas of infant cry and provides an insight on the current cutting-edge works in infant cry signal analysis and classification. We also propose future research directions in data processing, feature extraction, and neural network classification fields to better understand, interpret, and process infant cry signals.


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