Informatik
Refine
Document Type
- Conference proceeding (569)
- Journal article (199)
- Book chapter (62)
- Doctoral Thesis (18)
- Book (10)
- Anthology (10)
- Patent / Standard / Guidelines (2)
- Report (2)
- Working Paper (2)
Is part of the Bibliography
- yes (874)
Institute
- Informatik (874)
- Technik (2)
- ESB Business School (1)
Publisher
- Springer (204)
- Hochschule Reutlingen (104)
- IEEE (90)
- Gesellschaft für Informatik e.V (62)
- Elsevier (47)
- Association for Computing Machinery (38)
- IARIA (26)
- RWTH Aachen (15)
- De Gruyter (14)
- Association for Information Systems (12)
Menopause is the permanent cessation of menstruation occurring naturally in women's aging. The most frequent symptoms associated with menopausal phases are mucosal dryness, increased weight and body fat, and changes in sleep patterns. Oral symptoms in menopause derived from saliva flow reduction can lead to dry mouth, ulcers, and alterations of taste and swallowing patterns. However, the oral health phenotype of postmenopausal women has not been characterized. The aim of the study was to determine postmenopausal women's oral phenotype, including medical history, lifestyle, and oral assessment through artificial intelligence algorithms. We enrolled 100 postmenopausal women attending the Dental School of the University of Seville were included in the study. We collected an extensive questionnaire, including lifestyle, medication, and medical history. We used an unsupervised k-means algorithm to cluster the data following standard features for data analysis. Our results showed the main oral symptoms in our postmenopausal cohort were reduced salivary flow and periodontal disease. Relying on the classical assessment of the collected data, we might have a biased evaluation of postmenopausal women. Then, we used artificial intelligence analysis to evaluate our data obtaining the main features and providing a reduced feature defining the oral health phenotype. We found 6 clusters with similar features, including medication affecting salivation or smoking as essential features to obtain different phenotypes. Thus, we could obtain main features considering differential oral health phenotypes of postmenopausal women with an integrative approach providing new tools to assess the women in the dental clinic.
The introduction of smart contracts has expanded the applicability of blockchains to many domains beyond finance and cryptocurrencies. Moreover, different blockchain technologies have evolved that target special requirements. As a result, in practice, often a combination of different blockchain systems is required to achieve an overall goal. However, due to the heterogeneity of blockchain protocols, the execution of distributed business transactions that span several blockchains leads to multiple interoperability and integration challenges. Therefore, in this article, we examine the domain of Cross-Chain Smart Contract Invocations (CCSCIs), which are distributed transactions that involve the invocation of smart contracts hosted on two or more blockchain systems. We conduct a systematic multi-vocal literature review to get an overview of the available CCSCI approaches. We select 20 formal literature studies and 13 high-quality gray literature studies, extract data from them, and analyze it to derive the CCSCI Classification Framework. With the help of the framework, we group the approaches into two categories and eight subcategories. The approaches differ in multiple characteristics, e.g., the mechanisms they follow, and the capabilities and transaction processing semantics they offer. Our analysis indicates that all approaches suffer from obstacles that complicate real-world adoption, such as the low support for handling heterogeneity and the need for trusted third parties.
This paper explores the application of People Analytics in
recruiting professors for universities of applied sciences. Using data-driven personas, the research project aims to identify and communicate the different paths and connections leading candidates to a professorship. The authors introduce the concept of personas, describe the underlying data source and derive an example for the current project.
Purpose
As a response to the increased frequency of disruptive events and intense competition, organizational agility has become a key concept in organizational research. Fostering organizational agility requires leveraging knowledge that exists both outside (exploration) and inside (exploitation) the organization. This research tests the so-called ambidexterity hypothesis, which claims that a balance between exploration and exploitation leads to increased organizational outcomes, including the development of organizational agility. Complementing previously established measurement models on ambidexterity, this research proposes an alternative measurement model to analyze how ambidexterity can enhance organizational agility and, indirectly, performance, taking into consideration the moderating effect of environmental competitiveness.
Design/methodology/approach
A review of existing measurement models for ambidexterity shows that tension, a crucial aspect of ambidexterity, is often neglected. The authors, therefore, develop a new measurement model of ambidexterity to incorporate ambidexterity-induced tension. Using this measurement model, they examine the effect of ambidexterity on the development of entrepreneurial and adaptive agility as well as performance.
Findings
Ambidexterity positively influences both entrepreneurial and adaptive agility, indicating that a balance between exploration and exploitation has superior organizational effects. This finding confirms the ambidexterity hypothesis with respect to organizational agility. Furthermore, both entrepreneurial and adaptive agility drive organizational performance. These two indirect effects via agility fully mediate the impact of ambidexterity on organizational performance. Finally, environmental competitiveness positively moderates the relationship between ambidexterity and adaptive agility.
Originality/value
The findings extend research on ambidexterity by showing its positive effects on organizational agility. Furthermore, the study proposes an alternative operationalization to capture the ambidexterity construct that may lay the groundwork for further applications of the ambidexterity concept.
Software scripts for sensor data extraction in Rasberry Pi: user-space and kernel-space comparison
(2024)
This paper compares two popular scripting implementations for hardware prototyping: Python scripts execut from User-Space and C-based Linux-Driver processes executed from Kernel-Space, which can provide information to researchers when considering one or another in their implementations. Conclusions exhibit that deploying software scripts in the kernel space makes it possible to grant a certain quality of sensor information using a Raspberry Pi without the need for advanced real-time operational systems.
Accurate monitoring of a patient's heart rate is a key element in the medical observation and health monitoring. In particular, its importance extends to the identification of sleep-related disorders. Various methods have been established that involve sensor-based recording of physiological signals followed by automated examination and analysis. This study attempts to evaluate the efficacy of a non-invasive HR monitoring framework based on an accelerometer sensor specifically during sleep. To achieve this goal, the motion induced by thoracic movements during cardiac contractions is captured by a device installed under the mattress. Signal filtering techniques and heart rate estimation using the symlets6 wavelet are part of the implemented computational framework described in this article. Subsequent analysis indicates the potential applicability of this system in the prognostic domain, with an average error margin of approximately 3 beats per minute. The results obtained represent a promising advancement in non-invasive heart rate monitoring during sleep, with potential implications for improved diagnosis and management of cardiovascular and sleep-related disorders.
The massive use of patient data for the training of artificial intelligence algorithms is common nowadays in medicine. In this scientific work, a statistical analysis of one of the most used datasets for the training of artificial intelligence models for the detection of sleep disorders is performed: sleep health heart study 2. This study focuses on determining whether the gender and age of the patients have a relevant influence to consider working with differentiated datasets based on these variables for the training of artificial intelligence models.
Human pose estimation (HPE) is integral to scene understanding in numerous safety-critical domains involving human-machine interaction, such as autonomous driving or semi-automated work environments. Avoiding costly mistakes is synonymous with anticipating failure in model predictions, which necessitates meta-judgments on the accuracy of the applied models. Here, we propose a straightforward human pose regression framework to examine the behavior of two established methods for simultaneous aleatoric and epistemic uncertainty estimation: maximum a-posteriori (MAP) estimation with Monte-Carlo variational inference and deep evidential regression (DER). First, we evaluate both approaches on the quality of their predicted variances and whether these truly capture the expected model error. The initial assessment indicates that both methods exhibit the overconfidence issue common in deep probabilistic models. This observation motivates our implementation of an additional recalibration step to extract reliable confidence intervals. We then take a closer look at deep evidential regression, which, to our knowledge, is applied comprehensively for the first time to the HPE problem. Experimental results indicate that DER behaves as expected in challenging and adverse conditions commonly occurring in HPE and that the predicted uncertainties match their purported aleatoric and epistemic sources. Notably, DER achieves smooth uncertainty estimates without the need for a costly sampling step, making it an attractive candidate for uncertainty estimation on resource-limited platforms.
Intracranial brain tumors are one of the ten most common malignant cancers and account for substantial morbidity and mortality. The largest histological category of primary brain tumors is the gliomas which occur with an ultimate heterogeneous appearance and can be challenging to discern radiologically from other brain lesions. Neurosurgery is mostly the standard of care for newly diagnosed glioma patients and may be followed by radiation therapy and adjuvant temozolomide chemotherapy.
However, brain tumor surgery faces fundamental challenges in achieving maximal tumor removal while avoiding postoperative neurologic deficits. Two of these neurosurgical challenges are presented as follows. First, manual glioma delineation, including its sub-regions, is considered difficult due to its infiltrative nature and the presence of heterogeneous contrast enhancement. Second, the brain deforms its shape, called “brain shift,” in response to surgical manipulation, swelling due to osmotic drugs, and anesthesia, which limits the utility of pre-operative imaging data for guiding the surgery.
Image-guided systems provide physicians with invaluable insight into anatomical or pathological targets based on modern imaging modalities such as magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and Ultrasound (US). The image-guided toolkits are mainly computer-based systems, employing computer vision methods to facilitate the performance of peri-operative surgical procedures. However, surgeons still need to mentally fuse the surgical plan from pre-operative images with real-time information while manipulating the surgical instruments inside the body and monitoring target delivery. Hence, the need for image guidance during neurosurgical procedures has always been a significant concern for physicians.
This research aims to develop a novel peri-operative image-guided neurosurgery (IGN) system, namely DeepIGN, that can achieve the expected outcomes of brain tumor surgery, thus maximizing the overall survival rate and minimizing post-operative neurologic morbidity. In the scope of this thesis, novel methods are first proposed for the core parts of the DeepIGN system of brain tumor segmentation in MRI and multimodal pre-operative MRI to the intra-operative US (iUS) image registration using the recent developments in deep learning. Then, the output prediction of the employed deep learning networks is further interpreted and examined by providing human-understandable explainable maps. Finally, open-source packages have been developed and integrated into widely endorsed software, which is responsible for integrating information from tracking systems, image visualization, image fusion, and displaying real-time updates of the instruments relative to the patient domain.
The components of DeepIGN have been validated in the laboratory and evaluated in the simulated operating room. For the segmentation module, DeepSeg, a generic decoupled deep learning framework for automatic glioma delineation in brain MRI, achieved an accuracy of 0.84 in terms of the dice coefficient for the gross tumor volume. Performance improvements were observed when employing advancements in deep learning approaches such as 3D convolutions over all slices, region-based training, on-the-fly data augmentation techniques, and ensemble methods.
To compensate for brain shift, an automated, fast, and accurate deformable approach, iRegNet, is proposed for registering pre-operative MRI to iUS volumes as part of the multimodal registration module. Extensive experiments have been conducted on two multi-location databases: the BITE and the RESECT. Two expert neurosurgeons conducted additional qualitative validation of this study through overlaying MRI-iUS pairs before and after the deformable registration. Experimental findings show that the proposed iRegNet is fast and achieves state-of-the-art accuracies. Furthermore, the proposed iRegNet can deliver competitive results, even in the case of non-trained images, as proof of its generality and can therefore be valuable in intra-operative neurosurgical guidance.
For the explainability module, the NeuroXAI framework is proposed to increase the trust of medical experts in applying AI techniques and deep neural networks. The NeuroXAI includes seven explanation methods providing visualization maps to help make deep learning models transparent. Experimental findings showed that the proposed XAI framework achieves good performance in extracting both local and global contexts in addition to generating explainable saliency maps to help understand the prediction of the deep network. Further, visualization maps are obtained to realize the flow of information in the internal layers of the encoder-decoder network and understand the contribution of MRI modalities in the final prediction. The explainability process could provide medical professionals with additional information about tumor segmentation results and therefore aid in understanding how the deep learning model is capable of processing MRI data successfully.
Furthermore, an interactive neurosurgical display has been developed for interventional guidance, which supports the available commercial hardware such as iUS navigation devices and instrument tracking systems. The clinical environment and technical requirements of the integrated multi-modality DeepIGN system were established with the ability to incorporate: (1) pre-operative MRI data and associated 3D volume reconstructions, (2) real-time iUS data, and (3) positional instrument tracking. This system's accuracy was tested using a custom agar phantom model, and its use in a pre-clinical operating room is simulated. The results of the clinical simulation confirmed that system assembly was straightforward, achievable in a clinically acceptable time of 15 min, and performed with a clinically acceptable level of accuracy.
In this thesis, a multimodality IGN system has been developed using the recent advances in deep learning to accurately guide neurosurgeons, incorporating pre- and intra-operative patient image data and interventional devices into the surgical procedure. DeepIGN is developed as open-source research software to accelerate research in the field, enable ease of sharing between multiple research groups, and continuous developments by the community. The experimental results hold great promise for applying deep learning models to assist interventional procedures - a crucial step towards improving the surgical treatment of brain tumors and the corresponding long-term post-operative outcomes.
In order to ensure sufficient recovery of the human body and brain, healthy sleep is indispensable. For this purpose, appropriate therapy should be initiated at an early stage in the case of sleep disorders. For some sleep disorders (e.g., insomnia), a sleep diary is essential for diagnosis and therapy monitoring. However, subjective measurement with a sleep diary has several disadvantages, requiring regular action from the user and leading to decreased comfort and potential data loss. To automate sleep monitoring and increase user comfort, one could consider replacing a sleep diary with an automatic measurement, such as a smartwatch, which would not disturb sleep. To obtain accurate results on the evaluation of the possibility of such a replacement, a field study was conducted with a total of 166 overnight recordings, followed by an analysis of the results. In this evaluation, objective sleep measurement with a Samsung Galaxy Watch 4 was compared to a subjective approach with a sleep diary, which is a standard method in sleep medicine. The focus was on comparing four relevant sleep characteristics: falling asleep time, waking up time, total sleep time (TST), and sleep efficiency (SE). After evaluating the results, it was concluded that a smartwatch could replace subjective measurement to determine falling asleep and waking up time, considering some level of inaccuracy. In the case of SE, substitution was also proved to be possible. However, some individual recordings showed a higher discrepancy in results between the two approaches. For its part, the evaluation of the TST measurement currently does not allow us to recommend substituting the measurement method for this sleep parameter. The appropriateness of replacing sleep diary measurement with a smartwatch depends on the acceptable levels of discrepancy. We propose four levels of similarity of results, defining ranges of absolute differences between objective and subjective measurements. By considering the values in the provided table and knowing the required accuracy, it is possible to determine the suitability of substitution in each individual case. The introduction of a “similarity level” parameter increases the adaptability and reusability of study findings in individual practical cases.