Search results for " Computer-Assisted"

showing 10 items of 1033 documents

Photoplethysmography in dogs and cats: a selection of alternative measurement sites for a pet monitor.

2018

Objective Photoplethysmography (PPG) is an increasingly popular health and well-being tool for monitoring heart rate and oxygen saturation. Due to the pigmentation and hairiness of dogs and cats, a pulse oximeter is routinely placed solely on the tongue. As this approach is feasible only for pet monitor use during surgical procedures, we investigate PPG signal quality on several other measurement sites that would be better tolerated by conscious animals. Approach Acquired PPG signals are analyzed by four signal quality indices: mean baseline, signal power, kurtosis, and tolerance score. Main results In dogs, the metacarpus and tail can be substituted for oral pulse oximeter placement since …

Physiology0206 medical engineeringBiomedical EngineeringBiophysics02 engineering and technologySignal03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineDogsSignal qualityPhysiology (medical)PhotoplethysmogramHeart rateMedicineAnimalsPhotoplethysmographyOxygen saturation (medicine)CATSPulse (signal processing)business.industrySignal Processing Computer-AssistedPetsSurgical procedures020601 biomedical engineeringCatssense organsbusiness030217 neurology & neurosurgeryBiomedical engineeringPhysiological measurement
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Interictal cardiorespiratory variability in temporal lobe and absence epilepsy in childhood

2015

It is well known that epilepsy has a profound effect on the autonomic nervous system, especially on the autonomic control of heart rate and respiration. This effect has been widely studied during seizure activity, but less attention has been given to interictal (i.e. seizure-free) activity. The studies that have been done on this topic, showed that heart rate and respiration can be affected individually, even without the occurrence of seizures. In this work, the interactions between these two individual physiological variables are analysed during interictal activity in temporal lobe and absence epilepsy in childhood. These interactions are assessed by decomposing the predictive information …

PhysiologyInformation Theory02 engineering and technologyElectroencephalographyMultimodal Imaging01 natural sciencesAutonomic controlElectrocardiographyEpilepsy0302 clinical medicineHeart RateHeart rate variabilityChildmedicine.diagnostic_testSISTARespirationheart rate variabilityElectroencephalographySignal Processing Computer-Assistedtemporal lobe epilepsy3. Good healthabsence epilepsyCardiologyPsychologymedicine.medical_specialty0206 medical engineeringBiophysicsBiomedical EngineeringTemporal lobe03 medical and health sciencesInternal medicinePhysiology (medical)0103 physical sciencesRespirationHeart ratemedicineHumansIctal010306 general physicsinformation dynamicbusiness.industryCardiorespiratory fitnessmedicine.disease020601 biomedical engineeringAutonomic nervous systemEpilepsy AbsenceEpilepsy Temporal LobeBiophysicSettore ING-INF/06 - Bioingegneria Elettronica E InformaticaepilepsyTransfer entropybusinessNeuroscience030217 neurology & neurosurgery
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ATP distribution and localization of mitochondria in Suberites domuncula (Olivi 1792) tissue

2011

SUMMARY The metabolic energy state of sponge tissue in vivo is largely unknown. Quantitative bioluminescence-based imaging was used to analyze the ATP distribution of Suberites domuncula (Olivi 1792) tissue, in relation to differences between the cortex and the medulla. This method provides a quantitative picture of the ATP distribution closely reflecting the in vivo situation. The obtained data suggest that the highest ATP content occurs around channels in the sponge medulla. HPLC reverse-phase C-18, used for measurement of ATP content, established a value of 1.62 μmol ATP g–1 dry mass in sponge medulla, as opposed to 0.04 μmol ATP g–1 dry mass in the cortex, thus indicating a specific and…

PhysiologyProtein subunitIn situ hybridizationAquatic ScienceBiologyMitochondrionAdenosine TriphosphateImage Processing Computer-AssistedAnimalsMolecular BiologyChromatography High Pressure LiquidIn Situ HybridizationEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsMedullaArginine KinaseArginine kinaseATP distribution; mitochondria; imaging bioluminescence; HPLC; Porifera; Suberites domunculabiology.organism_classificationImmunohistochemistryMitochondriaSuberites domunculaSpongeBiochemistryOrgan SpecificityInsect Sciencebiology.proteinAnimal Science and ZoologyMitochondrion localizationEnergy MetabolismSuberitesJournal of Experimental Biology
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Unsupervised recognition of retinal vascular junction points.

2014

Landmark points in retinal images can be used to create a graph representation to understand and to diagnose not only different pathologies of the eye, but also a variety of more general diseases. Aim of this paper is the description of a non-supervised methodology to distinguish between bifurcations and crossings of the retinal vessels, which can be used in differentiating between arteries and veins. A thinned representation of the binarized image, is used to identify pixels with three or more neighbors. Junction points are classified into bifurcations or crossovers according to their geometrical and topological properties. The proposed approach is successfully compared with the state-of-t…

PixelSettore INF/01 - InformaticaComputer sciencebusiness.industryRetinal VesselsRetinalSensitivity and SpecificityImage (mathematics)Pattern Recognition Automatedchemistry.chemical_compoundUnsupervised Recognition of Retinal Vascular Junction PointschemistryImage Interpretation Computer-AssistedHumansComputer visionArtificial intelligenceRepresentation (mathematics)businessAlgorithmsAnnual International Conference of the IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society. IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society. Annual International Conference
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Influence of pixel size on quantification of airway wall thickness in computed tomography.

2009

Objectives: The purpose of this study was to determine the point where a further decrease in voxel size does not result in better automatic quantification of the bronchial wall thickness by using 2 different assessment techniques. Materials and Methods: The results from the commonly used full-width-at-half-maximum (FWHM) principle and a new technique (integral-based method [IBM]) were compared for thin-section multidetector computed tomography (MDCT) data sets from an airway phantom containing 10 different tubular airway phantoms and in a human subsegmental bronchus in vivo. Correlation with the actual wall thickness and comparison of the wall thicknesses assessed for different voxel sizes …

Pixelmedicine.diagnostic_testbusiness.industryPhantoms ImagingComputed tomographyField of viewBronchiBronchographycomputer.software_genreImaging phantomRadiographic Image EnhancementFull width at half maximumVoxelApproximation errorComputer GraphicsMedicineHumansRadiographic Image Interpretation Computer-AssistedRadiology Nuclear Medicine and imagingbusinessNuclear medicineTomography X-Ray ComputedImage resolutioncomputerSoftwareJournal of computer assisted tomography
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Superresolved imaging of remote moving targets.

2006

We present a superresolving approach that allows one to exceed the diffraction limit and recover highly resolved contours of moving targets from a sequence of low-resolution images. The presented approach is suitable for remote sensing applications. The resolution decoding algorithm that is used to recover the high-resolution features of the target can be run partially via optical means and that way can be used to reduce the required computational complexity.

Point spread functionComputational complexity theorybusiness.industryComputer scienceRemote sensing applicationMovementComputingMethodologies_IMAGEPROCESSINGANDCOMPUTERVISIONVideo RecordingInformation Storage and RetrievalReproducibility of ResultsImage processingIterative reconstructionImage EnhancementSensitivity and SpecificityAtomic and Molecular Physics and OpticsPattern Recognition AutomatedOpticsSubtraction TechniqueImage Interpretation Computer-AssistedPhotographyLimit (mathematics)businessImage resolutionDecoding methodsAlgorithmsOptics letters
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Quasi-spherical focal spot in two-photon scanning microscopy by three-ring apodization

2005

International audience; We present a beam-shaping technique for two-photon excitation (TPE) fluorescence microscopy. We show that by inserting a properly designed three-ring pupil filter in the illumination beam of the microscope, the effective optical sectioning capacity of such a system improves so that the point spread function gets a quasi-spherical shape. Such an improvement, which allows the acquisition of 3D images with isotropic quality, is obtained at the expense of only a small increase of the overall energy in the axial sidelobes. The performance of this technique is illustrated with a scanning TPE microscopy experiment in which the image of small beads is obtained. We demonstrat…

Point spread functionHistologyMaterials scienceMicroscopeOptical sectioning02 engineering and technology01 natural scienceslaw.invention010309 opticsQuality (physics)OpticsTwo-photon excitation microscopyApodizationlaw0103 physical sciencesMicroscopyImage Processing Computer-AssistedInstrumentationtwo-photon excitation[PHYS.PHYS.PHYS-OPTICS]Physics [physics]/Physics [physics]/Optics [physics.optics]business.industry021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologybeam shaping3. Good healthMedical Laboratory TechnologyMicroscopy Fluorescence Multiphotonoptical sectioning effectAnatomy0210 nano-technologybusinessBeam (structure)Algorithms
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Cryo-negative staining

1998

Abstract A procedure is presented for the preparation of thin layers of vitrified biological suspensions in the presence of ammonium molybdate, which we termcryo-negative staining. The direct blotting of sample plus stain solution on holey carbon supports produces thin aqueous films across the holes, which are routinely thiner than the aqueous film produced by conventional negative staining on a continuous carbon layer. Because of this, a higher than usual concentration of negative stain (ca. 16% rather than 2%) is required for cryo-negative staining in order to produce an optimal image contrast. The maintenance of the hydrated state, the absence of adsorption to a carbon film and associate…

Proteasome Endopeptidase ComplexAnalytical chemistryGeneral Physics and AstronomyNegative Staininglaw.inventionMultienzyme ComplexesStructural BiologylawImage Processing Computer-AssistedTobacco mosaic virusAnimalsGeneral Materials ScienceColoring AgentsMolybdenumAmmonium molybdateTurnip yellow mosaic virusbiologyChemistryChaperonin 60Cell BiologyCatalasebiology.organism_classificationNegative stainStainingCysteine EndopeptidasesMicroscopy ElectronCrystallographyFreeze DryingElectron diffractionHemocyaninsVirusesCattleElectron microscopeTomato bushy stunt virusMicron
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Red blood with blue-blood ancestry: Intriguing structure of a snail hemoglobin

2006

The phylogenetic enigma of snail hemoglobin, its isolated occurrence in a single gastropod family, the Planorbidae, and the lack of sequence data, stimulated the present study. We present here the complete cDNA and predicted amino acid sequence of two hemoglobin polypeptides from the planorbid Biomphalaria glabrata (intermediate host snail for the human parasite Schistosoma mansoni ). Both isoforms contain 13 different, cysteine-free globin domains, plus a small N-terminal nonglobin “plug” domain with three cysteines for subunit dimerization (total M r ≈ 238 kDa). We also identified the native hemoglobin molecule and present here a preliminary 3D reconstruction from electron microscopical …

Protein subunitmedicine.medical_treatmentMolecular Sequence DataBiologyEvolution MolecularHemoglobinschemistry.chemical_compoundImaging Three-DimensionalHemolymphHemolymphImage Processing Computer-AssistedmedicineAnimalsProtein IsoformsBiomphalaria glabrataAmino Acid SequenceGlobinPhylogenyMultidisciplinaryBiomphalariaSequence Homology Amino AcidHemocyaninBiological Sciencesbiology.organism_classificationMolecular biologyProtein Structure TertiaryRespiratory proteinMyoglobinchemistryHemoglobinProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
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RPPanalyzer Toolbox: An improved R package for analysis of reverse phase protein array data

2014

Analysis of large-scale proteomic data sets requires specialized software tools, tailored toward the requirements of individual approaches. Here we introduce an extension of an open-source software solution for analyzing reverse phase protein array (RPPA) data. The R package RPPanalyzer was designed for data preprocessing followed by basic statistical analyses and proteomic data visualization. In this update, we merged relevant data preprocessing steps into a single user-friendly function and included a new method for background noise correction as well as new methods for noise estimation and averaging of replicates to transform data in such a way that they can be used as input for a new t…

Proteomics0303 health sciencesbusiness.industryComputer scienceProtein Array AnalysisReverse phase protein lysate microarrayFunction (mathematics)computer.software_genreGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyToolboxBackground noise03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineSoftwareData visualizationRobustness (computer science)030220 oncology & carcinogenesisImage Processing Computer-AssistedData miningData pre-processingbusinesscomputerSoftware030304 developmental biologyBiotechnologyBioTechniques
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