positive symptom
- Asia > Taiwan (0.04)
- North America > United States > Wisconsin > Dane County > Madison (0.04)
- North America > United States > Louisiana > Orleans Parish > New Orleans (0.04)
- (10 more...)
- Asia > Taiwan (0.04)
- North America > United States > Wisconsin > Dane County > Madison (0.04)
- North America > United States > Louisiana > Orleans Parish > New Orleans (0.04)
- (10 more...)
Learning hidden cascades via classification
Manoharan, Derrick Gilchrist Edward, Goel, Anubha, Iosifidis, Alexandros, Hansen, Henri, Kanniainen, Juho
The spreading dynamics in social networks are often studied under the assumption that individuals' statuses, whether informed or infected, are fully observable. However, in many real-world situations, such statuses remain unobservable, which is crucial for determining an individual's potential to further spread the infection. While final statuses are hidden, intermediate indicators such as symptoms of infection are observable and provide useful representations of the underlying diffusion process. We propose a partial observability-aware Machine Learning framework to learn the characteristics of the spreading model. We term the method Distribution Classification, which utilizes the power of classifiers to infer the underlying transmission dynamics. Through extensive benchmarking against Approximate Bayesian Computation and GNN-based baselines, our framework consistently outperforms these state-of-the-art methods, delivering accurate parameter estimates across diverse diffusion settings while scaling efficiently to large networks. We validate the method on synthetic networks and extend the study to a real-world insider trading network, demonstrating its effectiveness in analyzing spreading phenomena where direct observation of individual statuses is not possible.
- Banking & Finance > Trading (1.00)
- Health & Medicine > Therapeutic Area > Infections and Infectious Diseases (0.46)
- Information Technology > Communications (1.00)
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence > Machine Learning > Statistical Learning (1.00)
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence > Machine Learning > Learning Graphical Models > Directed Networks > Bayesian Learning (0.66)
- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence > Representation & Reasoning > Uncertainty > Bayesian Inference (0.66)
Computational Mechanism for the Effect of Psychosis Community Treatment: A Conceptual Review from Neurobiology to Social Interaction
Benrimoh, David, Sibarium, Ely, Sheldon, Andrew, Powers, Albert
The computational underpinnings of positive psychotic symptoms have recently received significant attention. Candidate mechanisms include some combination of maladaptive priors and reduced updating of these priors during perception. A potential benefit of models with such mechanisms is their ability to link multiple levels of explanation. This is key to improving how we understand the experience of psychosis. Moreover, it points us towards more comprehensive avenues for therapeutic research by providing a putative mechanism that could allow for the generation of new treatments from first principles. In order to demonstrate this, our conceptual paper will discuss the application of the insights from previous computational models to an important and complex set of evidence-based clinical interventions with strong social elements, such as coordinated specialty care clinics in early psychosis and assertive community treatment. These interventions may include but also go beyond psychopharmacology, providing, we argue, structure and predictability for patients experiencing psychosis. We develop the argument that this structure and predictability directly counteract the relatively low precision afforded to sensory information in psychosis, while also providing the patient more access to external cognitive resources in the form of providers and the structure of the programs themselves. We discuss how computational models explain the resulting reduction in symptoms, as well as the predictions these models make about potential responses of patients to modifications or to different variations of these interventions. We also link, via the framework of computational models, the experiences of patients and response to interventions to putative neurobiology.
- Oceania > Australia (0.04)
- North America > United States > New York > New York County > New York City (0.04)
- North America > United States > Massachusetts > Middlesex County > Cambridge (0.04)
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REFUEL: Exploring Sparse Features in Deep Reinforcement Learning for Fast Disease Diagnosis
Peng, Yu-Shao, Tang, Kai-Fu, Lin, Hsuan-Tien, Chang, Edward
This paper proposes REFUEL, a reinforcement learning method with two techniques: {\em reward shaping} and {\em feature rebuilding}, to improve the performance of online symptom checking for disease diagnosis. Reward shaping can guide the search of policy towards better directions. Feature rebuilding can guide the agent to learn correlations between features. Together, they can find symptom queries that can yield positive responses from a patient with high probability. Experimental results justify that the two techniques in REFUEL allows the symptom checker to identify the disease more rapidly and accurately.
- Asia > Taiwan (0.04)
- North America > United States > Wisconsin > Dane County > Madison (0.04)
- North America > United States > Louisiana > Orleans Parish > New Orleans (0.04)
- (10 more...)
REFUEL: Exploring Sparse Features in Deep Reinforcement Learning for Fast Disease Diagnosis
Peng, Yu-Shao, Tang, Kai-Fu, Lin, Hsuan-Tien, Chang, Edward
This paper proposes REFUEL, a reinforcement learning method with two techniques: {\em reward shaping} and {\em feature rebuilding}, to improve the performance of online symptom checking for disease diagnosis. Reward shaping can guide the search of policy towards better directions. Feature rebuilding can guide the agent to learn correlations between features. Together, they can find symptom queries that can yield positive responses from a patient with high probability. Experimental results justify that the two techniques in REFUEL allows the symptom checker to identify the disease more rapidly and accurately.
- Asia > Taiwan (0.04)
- North America > United States > Wisconsin > Dane County > Madison (0.04)
- North America > United States > Louisiana > Orleans Parish > New Orleans (0.04)
- (10 more...)