Patent classifications
G06F18/2323
Computer-implemented perceptual apparatus
A method for compressing a digital representation of a stimulus includes encoding the digital representation as a feature vector within a feature space. The method also includes multiplying the feature vector with a Jacobian that maps the feature space to a non-Euclidean perceptual space according to a perceptual system that is capable of perceiving the stimulus. This multiplication generates a perceptual vector within the non-Euclidean perceptual space. The method also includes applying an update operator to the perceptual vector to move the perceptual vector in the perceptual space to an updated vector such that the updated vector has a lower entropy than the perceptual vector. The method also includes rounding the updated vector into a compressed vector that is smaller than the feature vector.
Systems and methods for mapping neuronal circuitry and clinical applications thereof
Systems and methods for mapping neuronal circuitry in accordance with embodiments of the invention are illustrated. One embodiment includes a method for generating a neuronal shape graph, including obtaining functional brain imaging data from an imaging device, where the functional brain imaging data includes a time-series of voxels describing neuronal activation over time in a patient's brain, lowering the dimensionality of the functional brain imaging data to a set of points, where each point represents the brain state at a particular time in the timeseries, binning the points into a plurality of bins, clustering the binned points, and generating a shape graph from the clustered points, where nodes in the shape graph represent a brain state and edges between the nodes represent transitions between brain states.
Systems and methods for mapping neuronal circuitry and clinical applications thereof
Systems and methods for mapping neuronal circuitry in accordance with embodiments of the invention are illustrated. One embodiment includes a method for generating a neuronal shape graph, including obtaining functional brain imaging data from an imaging device, where the functional brain imaging data includes a time-series of voxels describing neuronal activation over time in a patient's brain, lowering the dimensionality of the functional brain imaging data to a set of points, where each point represents the brain state at a particular time in the timeseries, binning the points into a plurality of bins, clustering the binned points, and generating a shape graph from the clustered points, where nodes in the shape graph represent a brain state and edges between the nodes represent transitions between brain states.
System and method for maintenance recommendation in industrial networks
Example implementations involve fault detection and isolation in industrial networks through defining a component as a combination of measurements and parameters and define an industrial network as a set of components connected with different degrees of connections (weights). Faults in industrial network are defined as unpermitted changes in component parameters. Further, the fault detection and isolation in industrial networks are formulated as a node classification problem in graph theory. Example implementations detect and isolate faults in industrial networks through 1) uploading/learning network structure, 2) detecting component communities in the network, 3) extracting features for each community, 4) using the extracted features for each community to detect and isolate faults, 5) at each time step, based on the faulty components provide maintenance recommendation for the network.
System and method for maintenance recommendation in industrial networks
Example implementations involve fault detection and isolation in industrial networks through defining a component as a combination of measurements and parameters and define an industrial network as a set of components connected with different degrees of connections (weights). Faults in industrial network are defined as unpermitted changes in component parameters. Further, the fault detection and isolation in industrial networks are formulated as a node classification problem in graph theory. Example implementations detect and isolate faults in industrial networks through 1) uploading/learning network structure, 2) detecting component communities in the network, 3) extracting features for each community, 4) using the extracted features for each community to detect and isolate faults, 5) at each time step, based on the faulty components provide maintenance recommendation for the network.
Agricultural plant detection and control system
A computing system includes image receiving logic configured to receive image data indicative of an image of a field, ground identification logic configured to identify a first image portion of the image representing ground in the field, image segmentation logic configured to identify a remaining image portion that omits the first image portion from the image, and crop classification logic configured to apply a crop classifier to the remaining image portion and identify a second image portion of the image that represents locations of crop plants in the field. The computing system also includes weed identification logic configured to identify locations of weed plants in the field based on the identification of the first and second image portions and control signal generation logic configured to generate a machine control signal based on the identified locations of the weed plants.
Agricultural plant detection and control system
A computing system includes image receiving logic configured to receive image data indicative of an image of a field, ground identification logic configured to identify a first image portion of the image representing ground in the field, image segmentation logic configured to identify a remaining image portion that omits the first image portion from the image, and crop classification logic configured to apply a crop classifier to the remaining image portion and identify a second image portion of the image that represents locations of crop plants in the field. The computing system also includes weed identification logic configured to identify locations of weed plants in the field based on the identification of the first and second image portions and control signal generation logic configured to generate a machine control signal based on the identified locations of the weed plants.
Shear wave based elasticity imaging using three-dimensional segmentation for ocular disease diagnosis
Retinal diseases, such as age-related macular degeneration (AMD), are the leading cause of blindness in the elderly population. Since no known cures are currently present, it is crucial to diagnose the condition in its early stages so that disease progression is monitored. Systems and methods for detecting and mapping the mechanical elasticity of retinal layers in the posterior eye are disclosed herein. A system including confocal shear wave acoustic radiation force optical coherence elastography (SW-ARF-OCE) is provided, wherein an ultrasound transducer and an optical scan head are co-aligned to facilitate in-vivo study of the retina. In addition, an automatic segmentation algorithm is used to isolate tissue layers and analyze the shear wave propagation within the retinal tissue to estimate mechanical stress on the retina and detect early stages of retinal diseases based on the estimated mechanical stress.
Cross-domain machine learning for imbalanced domains
Devices and techniques are generally described for cross-domain machine learning. A first machine learning model may be trained using first data of a first domain. Predictions may be generated by inputting a plurality of domain data from other domains apart from the first domain into the first machine learning model. For each of the predictions, a prediction error may be determined. A grouping of similar domains from among the other domains may be determined based on the prediction errors. A second machine learning model may be trained for the grouping of similar domains.
Systems and methods for multiple instance learning for classification and localization in biomedical imaging
The present disclosure is directed to systems and methods for classifying biomedical images. A feature classifier may generate a plurality of tiles from a biomedical image. Each tile may correspond to a portion of the biomedical image. The feature classifier may select a subset of tiles from the plurality of tiles by applying an inference model. The subset of tiles may have highest scores. Each score may indicate a likelihood that the corresponding tile includes a feature indicative of the presence of the condition. The feature classifier may determine a classification result for the biomedical image by applying an aggregation model. The classification result may indicate whether the biomedical includes the presence or lack of the condition.