Search results for "Opacity"
showing 3 items of 73 documents
Evaluation of radiological findings with COVID-19 lung lesions in Latvia in the view of artificial intelligence and radiologist
2022
Pēc Pasaules Veselības organizācijas datiem kopš pandēmijas sākuma kopējais ar Covid-19 saslimušo cilvēku skaits pārsniedz 500 miljonus. Mākslīgais intelekts (MI) paver plašas iespējas Covid-19 infekcijas izraisīto plaušu bojājumu diagnostikā, kas var uzlabot un atvieglojot radiologa darbu veicinot gan izmeklējuma specifitātes, gan sensitivitātes izvērtēšanas iespējas. Šī pētījuma galvenais mērķis bija salīdzināt MI un radiologa atradnes precizitāti Covid-19 radītā plaušu bojājuma izvērtēšanā un noteikt interpretācijas ierobežojumus un priekšrocības klīniskā kontekstā. Savukārt darba uzdevumi bija iepazīties un apkopot datus ar jaunāko literatūru par MI pielietošanas iespējām medicīnā. Apko…
Gastronomie : entre transparence et opacité Un jeu d'ombre et de lumière
2015
This article aims at highlighting the signs of transparency and opacity in gastronomic communication. The esthesic, aesthetic and ethical dimension will be considered through discursive and visual elements put at stake in the presentation of dishes so that their flavours as well as the sensations and emotions they produce will fully come out. It will illustrate the interactions between the creative chef and the guest who will feel sensations, each of them asserting the construction of their identity. Gastronomic semiotics will be considered as socio-semiotics, which takes into account aesthetic values of today's society and also accounts for the complexity of senses.
‘Seeing the Dark’: Grounding Phenomenal Transparency and Opacity in Precision Estimation for Active Inference
2018
One of the central claims of the Self-model Theory of Subjectivity is that the experience of being someone - even in a minimal form - arises through a transparent phenomenal self-model, which itself can in principle be reduced to brain processes. Here, we consider whether it is possible to distinguish between phenomenally transparent and opaque states in terms of active inference. We propose a relationship of phenomenal opacity to expected uncertainty or precision; i.e., the capacity for introspective attention and implicit mental action. Thus we associate introspective attention with the deployment of 'precision' that may render the perceptual evidence (for action) opaque, while treating t…