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Transfer Learning Based Diagnosis and Analysis of Lung Sound Aberrations

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

With the development of computer -systems that can collect and analyze enormous volumes of data, the medical profession is establishing several non-invasive tools. This work attempts to develop a non-invasive technique for identifying respiratory sounds acquired by a stethoscope and voice recording software via machine learning techniques. This study suggests a trained and proven CNN-based approach for categorizing respiratory sounds. A visual representation of each audio sample is constructed, allowing resource identification for classification using methods like those used to effectively describe visuals. We used a technique called Mel Frequency Cepstral Coefficients (MFCCs). Here, features are retrieved and categorized via VGG16 (transfer learning) and prediction is accomplished using 5-fold cross-validation. Employing various data splitting techniques, Respiratory Sound Database obtained cutting-edge results, including accuracy of 95%, precision of 88%, recall score of 86%, and F1 score of 81%. The ICBHI dataset is used to train and test the model.


Building an Effective Email Spam Classification Model with spaCy

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Today, people use email services such as Gmail, Outlook, AOL Mail, etc. to communicate with each other as quickly as possible to send information and official letters. Spam or junk mail is a major challenge to this type of communication, usually sent by botnets with the aim of advertising, harming and stealing information in bulk to different people. Receiving unwanted spam emails on a daily basis fills up the inbox folder. Therefore, spam detection is a fundamental challenge, so far many works have been done to detect spam using clustering and text categorisation methods. In this article, the author has used the spaCy natural language processing library and 3 machine learning (ML) algorithms Naive Bayes (NB), Decision Tree C45 and Multilayer Perceptron (MLP) in the Python programming language to detect spam emails collected from the Gmail service. Observations show the accuracy rate (96%) of the Multilayer Perceptron (MLP) algorithm in spam detection.


Forecasting Particle Accelerator Interruptions Using Logistic LASSO Regression

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Unforeseen particle accelerator interruptions, also known as interlocks, lead to abrupt operational changes despite being necessary safety measures. These may result in substantial loss of beam time and perhaps even equipment damage. We propose a simple yet powerful binary classification model aiming to forecast such interruptions, in the case of the High Intensity Proton Accelerator complex at the Paul Scherrer Institut. The model is formulated as logistic regression penalized by least absolute shrinkage and selection operator, based on a statistical two sample test to distinguish between unstable and stable states of the accelerator. The primary objective for receiving alarms prior to interlocks is to allow for countermeasures and reduce beam time loss. Hence, a continuous evaluation metric is developed to measure the saved beam time in any period, given the assumption that interlocks could be circumvented by reducing the beam current. The best-performing interlock-to-stable classifier can potentially increase the beam time by around 5 min in a day. Possible instrumentation for fast adjustment of the beam current is also listed and discussed.


Unsupervised Evaluation of Out-of-distribution Detection: A Data-centric Perspective

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Out-of-distribution (OOD) detection methods assume that they have test ground truths, i.e., whether individual test samples are in-distribution (IND) or OOD. However, in the real world, we do not always have such ground truths, and thus do not know which sample is correctly detected and cannot compute the metric like AUROC to evaluate the performance of different OOD detection methods. In this paper, we are the first to introduce the unsupervised evaluation problem in OOD detection, which aims to evaluate OOD detection methods in real-world changing environments without OOD labels. We propose three methods to compute Gscore as an unsupervised indicator of OOD detection performance. We further introduce a new benchmark Gbench, which has 200 real-world OOD datasets of various label spaces to train and evaluate our method. Through experiments, we find a strong quantitative correlation betwwen Gscore and the OOD detection performance. Extensive experiments demonstrate that our Gscore achieves state-of-the-art performance. Gscore also generalizes well with different IND/OOD datasets, OOD detection methods, backbones and dataset sizes. We further provide interesting analyses of the effects of backbones and IND/OOD datasets on OOD detection performance. The data and code will be available.


Encoding Domain Knowledge in Multi-view Latent Variable Models: A Bayesian Approach with Structured Sparsity

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Many real-world systems are described not only by data from a single source but via multiple data views. In genomic medicine, for instance, patients can be characterized by data from different molecular layers. Latent variable models with structured sparsity are a commonly used tool for disentangling variation within and across data views. However, their interpretability is cumbersome since it requires a direct inspection and interpretation of each factor from domain experts. Here, we propose MuVI, a novel multi-view latent variable model based on a modified horseshoe prior for modeling structured sparsity. This facilitates the incorporation of limited and noisy domain knowledge, thereby allowing for an analysis of multi-view data in an inherently explainable manner. We demonstrate that our model (i) outperforms state-of-the-art approaches for modeling structured sparsity in terms of the reconstruction error and the precision/recall, (ii) robustly integrates noisy domain expertise in the form of feature sets, (iii) promotes the identifiability of factors and (iv) infers interpretable and biologically meaningful axes of variation in a real-world multi-view dataset of cancer patients.


Can Fairness be Automated? Guidelines and Opportunities for Fairness-aware AutoML

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

The field of automated machine learning (AutoML) introduces techniques that automate parts of the development of machine learning (ML) systems, accelerating the process and reducing barriers for novices. However, decisions derived from ML models can reproduce, amplify, or even introduce unfairness in our societies, causing harm to (groups of) individuals. In response, researchers have started to propose AutoML systems that jointly optimize fairness and predictive performance to mitigate fairness-related harm. However, fairness is a complex and inherently interdisciplinary subject, and solely posing it as an optimization problem can have adverse side effects. With this work, we aim to raise awareness among developers of AutoML systems about such limitations of fairness-aware AutoML, while also calling attention to the potential of AutoML as a tool for fairness research. We present a comprehensive overview of different ways in which fairness-related harm can arise and the ensuing implications for the design of fairness-aware AutoML. We conclude that while fairness cannot be automated, fairness-aware AutoML can play an important role in the toolbox of an ML practitioner. We highlight several open technical challenges for future work in this direction. Additionally, we advocate for the creation of more user-centered assistive systems designed to tackle challenges encountered in fairness work.


Secret-Keeping in Question Answering

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Existing question-answering research focuses on unanswerable questions in the context of always providing an answer when a system can\dots but what about cases where a system {\bf should not} answer a question. This can either be to protect sensitive users or sensitive information. Many models expose sensitive information under interrogation by an adversarial user. We seek to determine if it is possible to teach a question-answering system to keep a specific fact secret. We design and implement a proof-of-concept architecture and through our evaluation determine that while possible, there are numerous directions for future research to reduce system paranoia (false positives), information leakage (false negatives) and extend the implementation of the work to more complex problems with preserving secrecy in the presence of information aggregation.


DeDA: Deep Directed Accumulator

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Chronic active multiple sclerosis lesions, also termed as rim+ lesions, can be characterized by a hyperintense rim at the edge of the lesion on quantitative susceptibility maps. These rim+ lesions exhibit a geometrically simple structure, where gradients at the lesion edge are radially oriented and a greater magnitude of gradients is observed in contrast to rim- (non rim+) lesions. However, recent studies have shown that the identification performance of such lesions remains unsatisfied due to the limited amount of data and high class imbalance. In this paper, we propose a simple yet effective image processing operation, deep directed accumulator (DeDA), that provides a new perspective for injecting domain-specific inductive biases (priors) into neural networks for rim+ lesion identification. Given a feature map and a set of sampling grids, DeDA creates and quantizes an accumulator space into finite intervals, and accumulates feature values accordingly. This DeDA operation is a generalized discrete Radon transform and can also be regarded as a symmetric operation to the grid sampling within the forward-backward neural network framework, the process of which is order-agnostic, and can be efficiently implemented with the native CUDA programming. Experimental results on a dataset with 177 rim+ and 3986 rim-lesions show that 10.1% of improvement in a partial (false positive rate < 0.1) area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (pROC AUC) and 10.2% of improvement in an area under the precision recall curve (PR AUC) can be achieved respectively comparing to other state-of-the-art methods. The source code is available online at https://github.com/tinymilky/DeDA


Android Malware Detection using Machine learning: A Review

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Malware for Android is becoming increasingly dangerous to the safety of mobile devices and the data they hold. Although machine learning(ML) techniques have been shown to be effective at detecting malware for Android, a comprehensive analysis of the methods used is required. We review the current state of Android malware detection us ing machine learning in this paper. We begin by providing an overview of Android malware and the security issues it causes. Then, we look at the various supervised, unsupervised, and deep learning machine learning approaches that have been utilized for Android malware detection. Addi tionally, we present a comparison of the performance of various Android malware detection methods and talk about the performance evaluation metrics that are utilized to evaluate their efficacy. Finally, we draw atten tion to the drawbacks and difficulties of the methods that are currently in use and suggest possible future directions for research in this area. In addition to providing insights into the current state of Android malware detection using machine learning, our review provides a comprehensive overview of the subject.


SAILOR: Perceptual Anchoring For Robotic Cognitive Architectures

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Symbolic anchoring is a crucial problem in the field of robotics, as it enables robots to obtain symbolic knowledge from the perceptual information acquired through their sensors. In cognitive-based robots, this process of processing sub-symbolic data from real-world sensors to obtain symbolic knowledge is still an open problem. To address this issue, this paper presents SAILOR, a framework for providing symbolic anchoring in ROS 2 ecosystem. SAILOR aims to maintain the link between symbolic data and perceptual data in real robots over time. It provides a semantic world modeling approach using two deep learning-based sub-symbolic robotic skills: object recognition and matching function. The object recognition skill allows the robot to recognize and identify objects in its environment, while the matching function enables the robot to decide if new perceptual data corresponds to existing symbolic data. This paper provides a description of the framework, the pipeline and development as well as its integration in MERLIN2, a hybrid cognitive architecture fully functional in robots running ROS 2.