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1.
Sensors (Basel) ; 22(24)2022 Dec 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36560304

ABSTRACT

Steel is one of the most basic ingredients, which plays an important role in the machinery industry. However, the steel surface defects heavily affect its quality. The demand for surface defect detectors draws much attention from researchers all over the world. However, there are still some drawbacks, e.g., the dataset is limited accessible or small-scale public, and related works focus on developing models but do not deeply take into account real-time applications. In this paper, we investigate the feasibility of applying stage-of-the-art deep learning methods based on YOLO models as real-time steel surface defect detectors. Particularly, we compare the performance of YOLOv5, YOLOX, and YOLOv7 while training them with a small-scale open-source NEU-DET dataset on GPU RTX 2080. From the experiment results, YOLOX-s achieves the best accuracy of 89.6% mAP on the NEU-DET dataset. Then, we deploy the weights of trained YOLO models on Nvidia devices to evaluate their real-time performance. Our experiments devices consist of Nvidia Jetson Nano and Jetson Xavier AGX. We also apply some real-time optimization techniques (i.e., exporting to TensorRT, lowering the precision to FP16 or INT8 and reducing the input image size to 320 × 320) to reduce detection speed (fps), thus also reducing the mAP accuracy.


Subject(s)
Industry , Research Personnel , Humans , Steel , Machine Learning
2.
Sensors (Basel) ; 22(11)2022 Jun 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35684876

ABSTRACT

Due to its significant global impact, both domestic and international efforts are underway to cure the infection and stop the COVID-19 virus from spreading further. In resource-limited environments, overwhelmed healthcare institutions and surveillance systems are struggling to cope with this epidemic, necessitating a specific strategic response. In this study, we looked into the COVID-19 situation and to establish trust, accountability, and transparency, we employed blockchain's immutable and tamper-proof properties. We offered a smart contract (SC)-based solution (Block-HPCT) that has been successfully tested to preserve a digital health passport (DHP) for vaccine recipients; also, for contact tracing (CT) we employed proof of location concept, which aids in a swift and credible response directly from the appropriate healthcare authorities. To connect on-chain and off-chain data, trusted and registered oracles were integrated and to provide a double layer of security along with symmetric key encryption; both Interplanetary File System (IPFS) and Hyperledger Fabric were merged as storage center. We also provided a full description of the suggested solution's system design, implementation, experiment results, and evaluation (privacy and cost analysis). As per the findings, the suggested approach performed satisfactorily across all significant assessment criteria, implying that it can lead the way for practical implementations and also can be used for similar types of situations where contact tracing of infectious can be crucial.


Subject(s)
Blockchain , COVID-19 , Communicable Diseases , COVID-19/prevention & control , Contact Tracing/methods , Humans , Privacy
3.
Sensors (Basel) ; 21(8)2021 Apr 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33918845

ABSTRACT

A vital and challenging task in computer vision is 3D Object Classification and Retrieval, with many practical applications such as an intelligent robot, autonomous driving, multimedia contents processing and retrieval, and augmented/mixed reality. Various deep learning methods were introduced for solving classification and retrieval problems of 3D objects. Almost all view-based methods use many views to handle spatial loss, although they perform the best among current techniques such as View-based, Voxelization, and Point Cloud methods. Many views make network structure more complicated due to the parallel Convolutional Neural Network (CNN). We propose a novel method that combines a Global Point Signature Plus with a Deep Wide Residual Network, namely GPSP-DWRN, in this paper. Global Point Signature Plus (GPSPlus) is a novel descriptor because it can capture more shape information of the 3D object for a single view. First, an original 3D model was converted into a colored one by applying GPSPlus. Then, a 32 × 32 × 3 matrix stored the obtained 2D projection of this color 3D model. This matrix was the input data of a Deep Residual Network, which used a single CNN structure. We evaluated the GPSP-DWRN for a retrieval task using the Shapnetcore55 dataset, while using two well-known datasets-ModelNet10 and ModelNet40 for a classification task. Based on our experimental results, our framework performed better than the state-of-the-art methods.

4.
Sensors (Basel) ; 21(4)2021 Feb 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33672489

ABSTRACT

In computer-aided diagnosis (CAD) systems, the automatic classification of the different types of the human epithelial type 2 (HEp-2) cells represents one of the critical steps in the diagnosis procedure of autoimmune diseases. Most of the methods prefer to tackle this task using the supervised learning paradigm. However, the necessity of having thousands of manually annotated examples constitutes a serious concern for the state-of-the-art HEp-2 cells classification methods. We present in this work a method that uses active learning in order to minimize the necessity of annotating the majority of the examples in the dataset. For this purpose, we use cross-modal transfer learning coupled with parallel deep residual networks. First, the parallel networks, which take simultaneously different wavelet coefficients as inputs, are trained in a fully supervised way by using a very small and already annotated dataset. Then, the trained networks are utilized on the targeted dataset, which is quite larger compared to the first one, using active learning techniques in order to only select the images that really need to be annotated among all the examples. The obtained results show that active learning, when mixed with an efficient transfer learning technique, can allow one to achieve a quite pleasant discrimination performance with only a few annotated examples in hands. This will help in building CAD systems by simplifying the burdensome task of labeling images while maintaining a similar performance with the state-of-the-art methods.


Subject(s)
Deep Learning , Diagnosis, Computer-Assisted , Epithelial Cells/classification , Autoimmune Diseases/diagnosis , Humans , Neural Networks, Computer
5.
Sensors (Basel) ; 20(9)2020 May 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32397567

ABSTRACT

Classifying the images that portray the Human Epithelial cells of type 2 (HEp-2) represents one of the most important steps in the diagnosis procedure of autoimmune diseases. Performing this classification manually represents an extremely complicated task due to the heterogeneity of these cellular images. Hence, an automated classification scheme appears to be necessary. However, the majority of the available methods prefer to utilize the supervised learning approach for this problem. The need for thousands of images labelled manually can represent a difficulty with this approach. The first contribution of this work is to demonstrate that classifying HEp-2 cell images can also be done using the unsupervised learning paradigm. Unlike the majority of the existing methods, we propose here a deep learning scheme that performs both the feature extraction and the cells' discrimination through an end-to-end unsupervised paradigm. We propose the use of a deep convolutional autoencoder (DCAE) that performs feature extraction via an encoding-decoding scheme. At the same time, we embed in the network a clustering layer whose purpose is to automatically discriminate, during the feature learning process, the latent representations produced by the DCAE. Furthermore, we investigate how the quality of the network's reconstruction can affect the quality of the produced representations. We have investigated the effectiveness of our method on some benchmark datasets and we demonstrate here that the unsupervised learning, when done properly, performs at the same level as the actual supervised learning-based state-of-the-art methods in terms of accuracy.


Subject(s)
Deep Learning , Epithelial Cells/cytology , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted , Cell Line , Cluster Analysis , Humans
6.
Sensors (Basel) ; 18(8)2018 Aug 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30103498

ABSTRACT

Machine fault diagnosis (MFD) has gained an important enthusiasm since the unfolding of the pattern recognition techniques in the last three decades. It refers to all of the studies that aim to automatically detect the faults on the machines using various kinds of signals that they can generate. The present work proposes a MFD system for the drilling machines that is based on the sounds they produce. The first key contribution of this paper is to present a system specifically designed for the drills, by attempting not only to detect the faulty drills but also to detect whether the sounds were generated during the active or the idling stage of the whole machinery system, in order to provide a complete remote control. The second key contribution of the work is to represent the power spectrum of the sounds as images and apply some transformations on them in order to reveal, expose, and emphasize the health patterns that are hidden inside them. The created images, the so-called power spectrum density (PSD)-images, are then given to a deep convolutional autoencoder (DCAE) for a high-level feature extraction process. The final step of the scheme consists of adopting the proposed PSD-images + DCAE features as the final representation of the original sounds and utilize them as the inputs of a nonlinear classifier whose outputs will represent the final diagnosis decision. The results of the experiments demonstrate the high discrimination potential afforded by the proposed PSD-images + DCAE features. They were also tested on a noisy dataset and the results show their robustness against noises.

7.
J Med Syst ; 35(6): 1573-93, 2011 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20703760

ABSTRACT

The rapid development of healthcare information management for 3D digital medical libraries, 3D PACS, and 3D medical diagnosis has addressed the security issues pertaining to medical IT technology. This paper presents multiple watermarking schemes for a healthcare information management system for 3D medical image data for the protection, authentication, indexing, and hiding of diagnosis information. The proposed scheme, which is based on POCS watermarking, embeds a robust watermark for a doctor's digital signature and an information retrieval indexing key to the distribution of vertex curvedness; the scheme also embeds a fragile watermark for diagnosis information and an authentication reference message to the vertex distance difference. The multiple embedding process creates three convex sets for robustness, fragileness, and invisibility and projects the 3D medical image data onto these three convex sets alternately and iteratively. Experimental results confirmed that the proposed scheme has the robustness and fragileness to handle various 3D geometric and mesh modifiers simultaneously.


Subject(s)
Computer Graphics/instrumentation , Computer Security/instrumentation , Database Management Systems/organization & administration , Imaging, Three-Dimensional/instrumentation , Algorithms , Humans , Information Storage and Retrieval/methods
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