Abstract: In the paper, the relative performances on spectral
classification of short exon and intron sequences of the human and
eleven model organisms is studied. In the simulations, all
combinations of sixteen one-sequence numerical representations, four
threshold values, and four window lengths are considered. Sequences
of 150-base length are chosen and for each organism, a total of
16,000 sequences are used for training and testing. Results indicate
that an appropriate combination of one-sequence numerical
representation, threshold value, and window length is essential for
arriving at top spectral classification results. For fixed-length
sequences, the precisions on exon and intron classification obtained
for different organisms are not the same because of their genomic
differences. In general, precision increases as sequence length
increases.
Abstract: Early detection of lung cancer through chest radiography is a widely used method due to its relatively affordable cost. In this paper, an approach to improve lung nodule visualization on chest radiographs is presented. The approach makes use of linear phase high-frequency emphasis filter for digital filtering and
histogram equalization for contrast enhancement to achieve improvements. Results obtained indicate that a filtered image can
reveal sharper edges and provide more details. Also, contrast enhancement offers a way to further enhance the global (or local) visualization by equalizing the histogram of the pixel values within
the whole image (or a region of interest). The work aims to improve lung nodule visualization of chest radiographs to aid detection of lung cancer which is currently the leading cause of cancer deaths worldwide.
Abstract: Noise contamination in a magnetic resonance (MR)
image could occur during acquisition, storage, and transmission in
which effective filtering is required to avoid repeating the MR
procedure. In this paper, an iterative asymmetrical triangle fuzzy
filter with moving average center (ATMAVi filter) is used to reduce
different levels of salt and pepper noise in a brain MR image. Besides
visual inspection on filtered images, the mean squared error (MSE) is
used as an objective measurement. When compared with the median
filter, simulation results indicate that the ATMAVi filter is effective
especially for filtering a higher level noise (such as noise density =
0.45) using a smaller window size (such as 3x3) when operated
iteratively or using a larger window size (such as 5x5) when operated
non-iteratively.