Paper List
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MCP-AI: Protocol-Driven Intelligence Framework for Autonomous Reasoning in Healthcare
This paper addresses the critical gap in healthcare AI systems that lack contextual reasoning, long-term state management, and verifiable workflows by...
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Model Gateway: Model Management Platform for Model-Driven Drug Discovery
This paper addresses the critical bottleneck of fragmented, ad-hoc model management in pharmaceutical research by providing a centralized, scalable ML...
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Tree Thinking in the Genomic Era: Unifying Models Across Cells, Populations, and Species
This paper addresses the fragmentation of tree-based inference methods across biological scales by identifying shared algorithmic principles and stati...
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SSDLabeler: Realistic semi-synthetic data generation for multi-label artifact classification in EEG
This paper addresses the core challenge of training robust multi-label EEG artifact classifiers by overcoming the scarcity and limited diversity of ma...
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Decoding Selective Auditory Attention to Musical Elements in Ecologically Valid Music Listening
This paper addresses the core challenge of objectively quantifying listeners' selective attention to specific musical components (e.g., vocals, drums,...
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Physics-Guided Surrogate Modeling for Machine Learning–Driven DLD Design Optimization
This paper addresses the core bottleneck of translating microfluidic DLD devices from research prototypes to clinical applications by replacing weeks-...
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Mechanistic Interpretability of Antibody Language Models Using SAEs
This work addresses the core challenge of achieving both interpretability and controllable generation in domain-specific protein language models, spec...
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Fluctuating Environments Favor Extreme Dormancy Strategies and Penalize Intermediate Ones
This paper addresses the core challenge of determining how organisms should tune dormancy duration to match the temporal autocorrelation of their envi...
Predictive Analytics for Foot Ulcers Using Time-Series Temperature and Pressure Data
Department of Computer Science, Middlesex University London, London, UK
30秒速读
IN SHORT: This paper addresses the critical need for continuous, real-time monitoring of diabetic foot health by developing an unsupervised anomaly detection framework that identifies early ulcer risk from wearable sensor data, overcoming limitations of sporadic clinical evaluations.
核心创新
- Methodology First comparative study applying both Isolation Forest and KNN algorithms to multimodal foot sensor data (temperature and pressure) for early DFU risk detection.
- Methodology Development of a comprehensive feature engineering pipeline extracting 15+ physiological features from raw sensor data, including pressure derivatives, temperature variation rates, and gait cycle metrics.
- Biology Identification of strong correlation (r=0.48) between mean pressure in sensor region 3 and maximum temperature, providing biomechanical evidence for combined sensor monitoring.
主要结论
- Isolation Forest demonstrated superior sensitivity for detecting subtle anomalies (micro-pressure changes <100 units) with optimized hyperparameters (100 trees, max_samples=0.6, contamination=0.05), making it ideal for early risk detection.
- KNN/LOF showed higher sensitivity to extreme deviations (temperature spikes >40°C, pressure peaks in January/June 2024) but with increased false positives, suitable for flagging severe cases requiring immediate intervention.
- Strong biomechanical correlations were identified between pressure and temperature features (max_pressure_pData_3 and max_temp_tData: r=0.41; mean_pressure_pData_3 and max_temp_tData: r=0.48), validating multimodal sensor integration.
摘要: Diabetic foot ulcers (DFUs) are a severe complication of diabetes, often resulting in significant morbidity. This paper presents a predictive analytics framework utilizing time-series data captured by wearable foot sensors—specifically NTC thin-film thermocouples for temperature measurement and FlexiForce pressure sensors for plantar load monitoring. Data was collected from healthy subjects walking on an instrumented pathway. Unsupervised machine learning algorithms, Isolation Forest and K-Nearest Neighbors (KNN), were applied to detect anomalies that may indicate early ulcer risk. Through rigorous data preprocessing and targeted feature engineering, physiologic patterns were extracted to identify subtle changes in foot temperature and pressure. Results demonstrate Isolation Forest is sensitive to micro-anomalies, while KNN is effective in flagging extreme deviations, albeit at a higher false-positive rate. Strong correlations between temperature and pressure readings support combined sensor monitoring for improved predictive accuracy. These findings provide a basis for real-time diabetic foot health surveillance, aiming to facilitate earlier intervention and reduce DFU incidence.