Paper List
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GOPHER: Optimization-based Phenotype Randomization for Genome-Wide Association Studies with Differential Privacy
This paper addresses the core challenge of balancing rigorous privacy protection with data utility when releasing full GWAS summary statistics, overco...
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Real-time Cricket Sorting By Sex A low-cost embedded solution using YOLOv8 and Raspberry Pi
This paper addresses the critical bottleneck in industrial insect farming: the lack of automated, real-time sex sorting systems for Acheta domesticus ...
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Training Dynamics of Learning 3D-Rotational Equivariance
This work addresses the core dilemma of whether to use computationally expensive equivariant architectures or faster symmetry-agnostic models with dat...
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Fast and Accurate Node-Age Estimation Under Fossil Calibration Uncertainty Using the Adjusted Pairwise Likelihood
This paper addresses the dual challenge of computational inefficiency and sensitivity to fossil calibration errors in Bayesian divergence time estimat...
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Few-shot Protein Fitness Prediction via In-context Learning and Test-time Training
This paper addresses the core challenge of accurately predicting protein fitness with only a handful of experimental observations, where data collecti...
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scCluBench: Comprehensive Benchmarking of Clustering Algorithms for Single-Cell RNA Sequencing
This paper addresses the critical gap of fragmented and non-standardized benchmarking in single-cell RNA-seq clustering, which hinders objective compa...
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Simulation and inference methods for non-Markovian stochastic biochemical reaction networks
This paper addresses the computational bottleneck of simulating and performing Bayesian inference for non-Markovian biochemical systems with history-d...
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Assessment of Simulation-based Inference Methods for Stochastic Compartmental Models
This paper addresses the core challenge of performing accurate Bayesian parameter inference for stochastic epidemic models when the likelihood functio...
Personalized optimization of pediatric HD-tDCS for dose consistency and target engagement
Southern University of Science and Technology | Brown University | University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign | University of Warwick | Carle Foundation Hospital
30秒速读
IN SHORT: This paper addresses the critical limitation of one-size-fits-all HD-tDCS protocols in pediatric populations by developing a personalized optimization framework that accounts for developmental anatomical variability and tissue conductivity uncertainty.
核心创新
- Methodology First dual-objective optimization framework for pediatric HD-tDCS that generates personalized Pareto fronts balancing target intensity and focality, enabling systematic trade-off analysis.
- Methodology Introduction of two clinically actionable strategies: dose-consistency (enforcing fixed target intensity across individuals) and target-engagement (maximizing intensity under safety limits), both robust to conductivity variations.
- Biology First systematic quantification of depth-dependent tissue conductivity sensitivity: superficial targets dominated by scalp/bone conductivities (R² up to 0.85), while deep targets shaped by gray/white matter conductivities.
主要结论
- Conventional montages show significant age-dependent reductions in target intensity (p<0.05, FDR-corrected) and systematic sex differences mediated by scalp volume (mediation effect p<0.05).
- Optimized solutions Pareto-dominate conventional approaches, achieving 15-25% higher focality at matched intensity and 20-30% higher intensity at matched focality (Mann-Whitney U, p<0.001).
- Both optimization strategies remain robust under large conductivity variations (1,800 optimizations across 600 perturbed models), with sparse electrode configurations (<0.1 mA threshold) preserving performance (n.s., Mann-Whitney U).
摘要: High-definition transcranial direct current stimulation (HD-tDCS) dosing in children remains largely empirical, relying on one-size-fits-all protocols despite rapid developmental changes in head anatomy and tissue properties that strongly modulate how transcranial currents reach the developing brain. Using 70 pediatric head models (ages 6–17) and commonly used cortical targets (primary motor cortex and left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex), our forward simulations find that standard montages produce marked age-dependent reductions in target electric-field intensity and systematic sex differences linked to tissue-volume covariation, underscoring the profound limitations of conventional uniform montages. To overcome these limitations, we introduce a developmentally informed, dual-objective optimization framework designed to generate personalized Pareto fronts summarizing the trade-off between electric-field intensity and focality. These subject-specific fronts reveal systematic performance improvements over conventional montages, yielding both higher focality at matched target intensity and higher intensity at matched focality. From these optimized solutions, we derive two clinically practical dosing prescriptions: a dose-consistency strategy that, for the first time, explicitly enforces fixed target intensity across individuals to implicitly mitigate demographic effects, and a target-engagement strategy that maximizes target intensity under safety limits. Both strategies remain robust to large conductivity variations, and we further show that dense HD-tDCS solutions admit sparse equivalents without performance loss under the target-engagement strategy. Across 1,800 optimizations in 600 conductivity-perturbed head models, we also find that tissue conductivity sensitivity is depth-dependent, with Pareto-front distributions for superficial cortical targets most influenced by gray matter, scalp, and bone conductivities, and those for a deep target predominantly shaped by gray and white matter conductivities. Together, these results establish a principled framework for pediatric HD-tDCS planning that explicitly accounts for developmental anatomy and physiological uncertainty, enabling reliable and individualized neuromodulation dosing in vulnerable pediatric populations.