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To train and validate the proposed method, we collected 895 axial spine MRI images from 143 subjects and manually measured the indices as the ground truth. The results show that all deep learning models obtain very small prediction errors, and the proposed DE-Net with CSDPR acquires the smallest error among all methods, indicating that our method has great potential for spine computer aided procedures.Antiviral peptides (AVPs) have been experimentally verified to block virus into host cells, which have antiviral activity with the decapeptide amide. Therefore, utilization of experimentally validated antiviral peptides is a potential alternative strategy for targeting medically important viruses. In this study, we propose a dual-channel deep neural network ensemble method for analyzing variable-length antiviral peptides. The LSTM channel can capture long-term dependencies for effectively studying original variable-length sequence data. The CONV channel can build dynamic neural network for analyzing the local evolution information. Also, our model can fine-tune the substitution matrix for the specifically functional peptides. Applying it to a novel experimentally verified dataset, our AVPs predictor, DeepAVP, demonstrates state-of-the-art performance of 92.4% accuracy and 0.85 MCC, which is far better than the existing prediction methods for identifying antiviral peptides. Therefore, DeepAVP, web server for predicting the effective AVPs, would make significantly contributions to peptide-based antiviral research. The web server is freely available at http//www.lbci.cn/deepavp/index.html.Bad construction of modeled care pathways can lead to satisfiability problems during the pathway execution. These problems can ultimately result in medical errors and need to be checked as formally as possible. Therefore, this study proposes a set of algorithms using a free open-source library dedicated to constraint programming allied with a DSL to encode and verify care pathways, checking four possible problems states in deadlock, non-determinism, inaccessible steps and transitions with logically equivalent guard conditions. We then test our algorithms in 84 real care pathways used both in hospitals and surgeries. Using our algorithms, we were able to find 200 problems taking less than 1 second to complete the verification on most pathways.Precise skin lesion classification is still challenging due to two problems, i.e., (1) inter-class similarity and intra-class variation of skin lesion images, and (2) the weak generalization ability of single Deep Convolutional Neural Network trained with limited data. Therefore, we propose a Global-Part Convolutional Neural Network (GP-CNN) model, which treats the fine-grained local information and global context information with equal importance. The Global-Part model consists of a Global Convolutional Neural Network (G-CNN) and a Part Convolutional Neural Network (P-CNN). Specifically, the G-CNN is trained with downscaled dermoscopy images, and is used to extract the global-scale information of dermoscopy images and produce the Classification Activation Map (CAM). While the P-CNN is trained with the CAM guided cropped image patches and is used to capture local-scale information of skin lesion regions. Additionally, we present a data-transformed ensemble learning strategy, which can further boost the classification performance by integrating the different discriminant information from GP-CNNs that are trained with original images, color constancy transformed images, and feature saliency transformed images, respectively. The proposed method is evaluated on the ISIC 2016 and ISIC 2017 Skin Lesion Challenge (SLC) classification datasets. Experimental results indicate that the proposed method can achieve the state-of-the-art skin lesion classification performance (i.e., an AP value of 0.718 on the ISIC 2016 SLC dataset and an Average Auc value of 0.926 on the ISIC 2017 SLC dataset) without any external data, compared with other current methods which need to use external data.Research on quantitative structure-activity relationships (QSAR) provides an effective approach to accurately determine new hits and promising lead compounds during drug discovery. In the past decades, various works have gained good performance for QSAR with the development of machine learning. The rise of deep learning, along with massive accessible chemical databases, made improvement on the QSAR performance. This paper proposes a novel deep-learning-based method to implement QSAR prediction by the concatenation of end-to-end encoder-decoder model and convolutional neural network (CNN) architecture. The encoder-decoder model is mainly used to generate fixed-size latent features to represent chemical molecules; while these features are then input into CNN framework to train a robust and stable model and finally to predict active chemicals. Two models with different schemes are investigated to evaluate the validity of our proposed model on the same data sets. Experimental results showed that our proposed method outperforms other state-of-the-art methods in successful identification of chemical molecule whether it is active.Ischemic stroke is a major cause of death and disability in adulthood worldwide. https://www.selleckchem.com/products/arry-382.html Because it has highly heterogeneous phenotypes, phenotyping of ischemic stroke is an essential task for medical research and clinical prognostication. However, this task is not a trivial one when the study population is large. Phenotyping of ischemic stroke depends primarily on manual annotation of medical records in previous studies. This study evaluated various strategies for automated phenotyping of ischemic stroke into the four subtypes of the Oxfordshire Community Stroke Project classification based on structured and unstructured data from electronical medical records (EMRs). A total of 4640 adult patients who were hospitalized for acute ischemic stroke in a teaching hospital were included. In addition to the structured items in the National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale, unstructured clinical narratives were preprocessed using MetaMap to identify medical concepts, which were then encoded into feature vectors. Various supervised machine learning algorithms were used to build classifiers.
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