Machine and Deep Learning (ML/DL) Algorithms for Next-Generation Healthcare Applications

2022 ◽  
pp. 203-224
Author(s):  
V. Pavithra ◽  
V. Jayalakshmi
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrew P. Creagh ◽  
Florian Lipsmeier ◽  
Michael Lindemann ◽  
Maarten De Vos

AbstractThe emergence of digital technologies such as smartphones in healthcare applications have demonstrated the possibility of developing rich, continuous, and objective measures of multiple sclerosis (MS) disability that can be administered remotely and out-of-clinic. Deep Convolutional Neural Networks (DCNN) may capture a richer representation of healthy and MS-related ambulatory characteristics from the raw smartphone-based inertial sensor data than standard feature-based methodologies. To overcome the typical limitations associated with remotely generated health data, such as low subject numbers, sparsity, and heterogeneous data, a transfer learning (TL) model from similar large open-source datasets was proposed. Our TL framework leveraged the ambulatory information learned on human activity recognition (HAR) tasks collected from wearable smartphone sensor data. It was demonstrated that fine-tuning TL DCNN HAR models towards MS disease recognition tasks outperformed previous Support Vector Machine (SVM) feature-based methods, as well as DCNN models trained end-to-end, by upwards of 8–15%. A lack of transparency of “black-box” deep networks remains one of the largest stumbling blocks to the wider acceptance of deep learning for clinical applications. Ensuing work therefore aimed to visualise DCNN decisions attributed by relevance heatmaps using Layer-Wise Relevance Propagation (LRP). Through the LRP framework, the patterns captured from smartphone-based inertial sensor data that were reflective of those who are healthy versus people with MS (PwMS) could begin to be established and understood. Interpretations suggested that cadence-based measures, gait speed, and ambulation-related signal perturbations were distinct characteristics that distinguished MS disability from healthy participants. Robust and interpretable outcomes, generated from high-frequency out-of-clinic assessments, could greatly augment the current in-clinic assessment picture for PwMS, to inform better disease management techniques, and enable the development of better therapeutic interventions.


Author(s):  
Celso M. de Melo ◽  
Antonio Torralba ◽  
Leonidas Guibas ◽  
James DiCarlo ◽  
Rama Chellappa ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
pp. 1826-1838
Author(s):  
Rojalina Priyadarshini ◽  
Rabindra K. Barik ◽  
Chhabi Panigrahi ◽  
Harishchandra Dubey ◽  
Brojo Kishore Mishra

This article describes how machine learning (ML) algorithms are very useful for analysis of data and finding some meaningful information out of them, which could be used in various other applications. In the last few years, an explosive growth has been seen in the dimension and structure of data. There are several difficulties faced by conventional ML algorithms while dealing with such highly voluminous and unstructured big data. The modern ML tools are designed and used to deal with all sorts of complexities of data. Deep learning (DL) is one of the modern ML tools which are commonly used to find the hidden structure and cohesion among these large data sets by giving proper training in parallel platforms with intelligent optimization techniques to further analyze and interpret the data for future prediction and classification. This article focuses on the use of DL tools and software which are used in past couple of years in various areas and especially in the area of healthcare applications.


2020 ◽  
Vol 79 (41-42) ◽  
pp. 31663-31690
Author(s):  
Debadyuti Mukherjee ◽  
Riktim Mondal ◽  
Pawan Kumar Singh ◽  
Ram Sarkar ◽  
Debotosh Bhattacharjee

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