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1.
Procedia Comput Sci ; 213: 428-434, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36466311

ABSTRACT

The effectiveness of predicting the dynamics of the coronavirus pandemic for Russia as a whole and for Moscow is studied for a two-year period beginning March 2020. The comparison includes well-proven population models and statistic methods along with a new data-driven model based on the LSTM neural network. The latter model is trained on a set of Russian regions simultaneously, and predicts the total number of cases on the 14-day forecast horizon. Prediction accuracy is estimated by the mean absolute percent error (MAPE). The results show that all the considered models, both simple and more complex, have similar efficiency. The lowest error achieved is 18% MAPE for Moscow and 8% MAPE for Russia.

2.
Procedia Comput Sci ; 193: 276-284, 2021.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34815816

ABSTRACT

The large amount of data accumulated so far on the dynamics of the COVID-19 outbreak has allowed assessing the accuracy of forecasting methods in retrospect. This work compares several basic time series analysis methods, including machine learning methods, for forecasting the number of confirmed cases for some days ahead. Year-long data for all regions of Russia has been used from the Yandex DataLens platform. As a result, accuracy estimates for these basic methods have been obtained for Russian regions and Russia as a whole, in dependence on the forecasting horizon. The best basic models for forecasting for 14 days are exponential smoothing and ARIMA, with an error of 11-19% by the MAPE metric for the latest part of the course of the epidemic. The accuracies obtained can be considered as baselines for more complex prospective models.

3.
Nanotechnology ; 31(4): 045201, 2020 Jan 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31578002

ABSTRACT

Neuromorphic systems consisting of artificial neurons and memristive synapses could provide a much better performance and a significantly more energy-efficient approach to the implementation of different types of neural network algorithms than traditional hardware with the Von-Neumann architecture. However, the memristive weight adjustment in the formal neuromorphic networks by the standard back-propagation techniques suffers from poor device-to-device reproducibility. One of the most promising approaches to overcome this problem is to use local learning rules for spiking neuromorphic architectures which potentially could be adaptive to the variability issue mentioned above. Different kinds of local rules for learning spiking systems are mostly realized on a bio-inspired spike-time-dependent plasticity (STDP) mechanism, which is an improved type of classical Hebbian learning. Whereas the STDP-like mechanism has already been shown to emerge naturally in memristive devices, the demonstration of its self-adaptive learning property, potentially overcoming the variability problem, is more challenging and has yet to be reported. Here we experimentally demonstrate an STDP-based learning protocol that ensures self-adaptation of the memristor resistive states, after only a very few spikes, and makes the plasticity sensitive only to the input signal configuration, but neither to the initial state of the devices nor their device-to-device variability. Then, it is shown that the self-adaptive learning of a spiking neuron with memristive weights on rate-coded patterns could also be realized with hardware-based STDP rules. The experiments have been carried out with nanocomposite-based (Co40Fe40B20) х (LiNbO3-y )100-х memristive structures, but their results are believed to be applicable to a wide range of memristive devices. All the experimental data were supported and extended by numerical simulations. There is a hope that the obtained results pave the way for building up reliable spiking neuromorphic systems composed of partially unreliable analog memristive elements, with a more complex architecture and the capability of unsupervised learning.


Subject(s)
Algorithms , Nanocomposites , Neural Networks, Computer , Computers , Nanocomposites/chemistry , Neurons/physiology
5.
Pol Arch Weter ; 23(4): 9-22, 1983.
Article in Polish | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6634461

ABSTRACT

Using Anderson's method for estimation of testosterone level by competitive protein binding, the authors determined plasma testosterone level in young bulls of three breeds: black and white, and red and white lowland. It was found that in bulls of black and white and red and white lowland breed the testosterone level showed great fluctuations without growing tendency. In charolais bulls, in pubescence, testosterone level was low and did not exceed 1 ng/1 ml, but it systematically increased beginning from the 14th month of life. No correlation of testosterone level with protein and energy intake or with sexual activity was observed in adult bulls (breeders) of black and white lowland breed during 12 months of examination.


Subject(s)
Cattle/physiology , Testosterone/blood , Animals , Breeding , Growth , Male , Semen/analysis , Sexual Behavior, Animal/physiology , Spermatozoa/physiology
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