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1.
Sensors (Basel) ; 23(20)2023 Oct 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37896541

ABSTRACT

Cloud organizations now face a challenge in managing the enormous volume of data and various resources in the cloud due to the rapid growth of the virtualized environment with many service users, ranging from small business owners to large corporations. The performance of cloud computing may suffer from ineffective resource management. As a result, resources must be distributed fairly among various stakeholders without sacrificing the organization's profitability or the satisfaction of its customers. A customer's request cannot be put on hold indefinitely just because the necessary resources are not available on the board. Therefore, a novel cloud resource allocation model incorporating security management is developed in this paper. Here, the Deep Linear Transition Network (DLTN) mechanism is developed for effectively allocating resources to cloud systems. Then, an Adaptive Mongoose Optimization Algorithm (AMOA) is deployed to compute the beamforming solution for reward prediction, which supports the process of resource allocation. Moreover, the Logic Overhead Security Protocol (LOSP) is implemented to ensure secured resource management in the cloud system, where Burrows-Abadi-Needham (BAN) logic is used to predict the agreement logic. During the results analysis, the performance of the proposed DLTN-LOSP model is validated and compared using different metrics such as makespan, processing time, and utilization rate. For system validation and testing, 100 to 500 resources are used in this study, and the results achieved a make-up of 2.3% and a utilization rate of 13 percent. Moreover, the obtained results confirm the superiority of the proposed framework, with better performance outcomes.

2.
Diagnostics (Basel) ; 13(16)2023 Aug 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37627904

ABSTRACT

Diabetes is a widely spread disease that significantly affects people's lives. The leading cause is uncontrolled levels of blood glucose, which develop eye defects over time, including Diabetic Retinopathy (DR), which results in severe visual loss. The primary factor causing blindness is considered to be DR in diabetic patients. DR treatment tries to control the disease's severity, as it is irreversible. The primary goal of this effort is to create a reliable method for automatically detecting the severity of DR. This paper proposes a new automated system (DR-NASNet) to detect and classify DR severity using an improved pretrained NASNet Model. To develop the DR-NASNet system, we first utilized a preprocessing technique that takes advantage of Ben Graham and CLAHE to lessen noise, emphasize lesions, and ultimately improve DR classification performance. Taking into account the imbalance between classes in the dataset, data augmentation procedures were conducted to control overfitting. Next, we have integrated dense blocks into the NASNet architecture to improve the effectiveness of classification results for five severity levels of DR. In practice, the DR-NASNet model achieves state-of-the-art results with a smaller model size and lower complexity. To test the performance of the DR-NASNet system, a combination of various datasets is used in this paper. To learn effective features from DR images, we used a pretrained model on the dataset. The last step is to put the image into one of five categories: No DR, Mild, Moderate, Proliferate, or Severe. To carry this out, the classifier layer of a linear SVM with a linear activation function must be added. The DR-NASNet system was tested using six different experiments. The system achieves 96.05% accuracy with the challenging DR dataset. The results and comparisons demonstrate that the DR-NASNet system improves a model's performance and learning ability. As a result, the DR-NASNet system provides assistance to ophthalmologists by describing an effective system for classifying early-stage levels of DR.

3.
Int J Comput Assist Radiol Surg ; 13(7): 1083-1095, 2018 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29492880

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: Lung cancer detection at its initial stages increases the survival chances of patients. Automatic detection of lung nodules facilitates radiologists during the diagnosis. However, there is a challenge of false positives in automated systems which may lead to wrong findings. Precise segmentation facilitates to accurately extract nodules from lung CT images in order to improve performance of the diagnostic method. METHODS: A multistage segmentation model is presented in this study. The lung region is extracted by applying corner-seeded region growing combined with differential evolution-based optimal thresholding. In addition to this, morphological operations are applied in boundary smoothing, hole filling and juxtavascular nodule extraction. Geometric properties along with 3D edge information are applied to extract nodule candidates. Geometric texture features descriptor (GTFD) followed by support vector machine-based ensemble classification is employed to distinguish actual nodules from the candidate set. RESULTS: A publicly available dataset, namely lung image database consortium and image database resource initiative, is used to evaluate performance of the proposed method. The classification is performed over GTFD feature vector and the results show 99% accuracy, 98.6% sensitivity and 98.2% specificity with 3.4 false positives per scan (FPs/scan). CONCLUSION: A lung nodule detection method is presented to facilitate radiologists in accurately diagnosing cancer from CT images. Results indicate that the proposed method has not only reduced FPs/scan but also significantly improved sensitivity as compared to related studies.


Subject(s)
Diagnosis, Computer-Assisted/methods , Lung Neoplasms/diagnostic imaging , Lung/diagnostic imaging , Solitary Pulmonary Nodule/diagnostic imaging , Databases, Factual , Humans , Radiographic Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted/methods , Sensitivity and Specificity , Support Vector Machine , Tomography, X-Ray Computed/methods
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