Travismcdaniel9863
Walking animals can continuously adapt their locomotion to deal with unpredictable changing environments. They can also take proactive steps to avoid colliding with an obstacle. In this study, we aim to realize such features for autonomous walking robots so that they can efficiently traverse complex terrains. To achieve this, we propose novel bioinspired adaptive neuroendocrine control. In contrast to conventional locomotion control methods, this approach does not require robot and environmental models, exteroceptive feedback, or multiple learning trials. It integrates three main modular neural mechanisms, relying only on proprioceptive feedback and short-term memory, namely 1) neural central pattern generator (CPG)-based control; 2) an artificial hormone network (AHN); and 3) unsupervised input correlation-based learning (ICO). The neural CPG-based control creates insect-like gaits, while the AHN can continuously adapt robot joint movement individually with respect to the terrain during the stance phase using only the torque feedback. In parallel, the ICO generates short-term memory for proactive obstacle negotiation during the swing phase, allowing the posterior legs to step over the obstacle before hitting it. The control approach is evaluated on a bioinspired hexapod robot walking on complex unpredictable terrains (e.g., gravel, grass, and extreme random stepfield). The results show that the robot can successfully perform energy-efficient autonomous locomotion and online continuous adaptation with proactivity to overcome such terrains. Since our adaptive neural control approach does not require a robot model, it is general and can be applied to other bioinspired walking robots to achieve a similar adaptive, autonomous, and versatile function.This article proposes to encode the distribution of features learned from a convolutional neural network (CNN) using a Gaussian mixture model (GMM). These parametric features, called GMM-CNN, are derived from chest computed tomography (CT) and X-ray scans of patients with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). We use the proposed GMM-CNN features as input to a robust classifier based on random forests (RFs) to differentiate between COVID-19 and other pneumonia cases. Our experiments assess the advantage of GMM-CNN features compared with standard CNN classification on test images. Using an RF classifier (80% samples for training; 20% samples for testing), GMM-CNN features encoded with two mixture components provided a significantly better performance than standard CNN classification (p less then 0.05). Specifically, our method achieved an accuracy in the range of 96.00%-96.70% and an area under the receiver operator characteristic (ROC) curve in the range of 99.29%-99.45%, with the best performance obtained by combining GMM-CNN features from both CT and X-ray images. Our results suggest that the proposed GMM-CNN features could improve the prediction of COVID-19 in chest CT and X-ray scans.Treatment effect estimation helps answer questions, such as whether a specific treatment affects the outcome of interest. One fundamental issue in this research is to alleviate the treatment assignment bias among those treated units and controlled units. Classical causal inference methods resort to the propensity score estimation, which unfortunately tends to be misspecified when only limited overlapping exists between the treated and the controlled units. Moreover, existing supervised methods mainly consider the treatment assignment information underlying the factual space, and thus, their performance of counterfactual inference may be degraded due to overfitting of the factual results. To alleviate those issues, we build on the optimal transport theory and propose a novel causal optimal transport (CausalOT) model to estimate an individual treatment effect (ITE). With the proposed propensity measure, CausalOT can infer the counterfactual outcome by solving a novel regularized optimal transport problem, which allows the utilization of global information on observational covariates to alleviate the issue of limited overlapping. In addition, a novel counterfactual loss is designed for CausalOT to align the factual outcome distribution with the counterfactual outcome distribution. Most importantly, we prove the theoretical generalization bound for the counterfactual error of CausalOT. Empirical studies on benchmark datasets confirm that the proposed CausalOT outperforms state-of-the-art causal inference methods.Enhancing the ubiquitous sensors and connected devices with computational abilities to realize visions of the Internet of Things (IoT) requires the development of robust, compact, and low-power deep neural network accelerators. Analog in-memory matrix-matrix multiplications enabled by emerging memories can significantly reduce the accelerator energy budget while resulting in compact accelerators. In this article, we design a hardware-aware deep neural network (DNN) accelerator that combines a planar-staircase resistive random access memory (RRAM) array with a variation-tolerant in-memory compute methodology to enhance the peak power efficiency by 5.64x and area efficiency by 4.7x over state-of-the-art DNN accelerators. Pulse application at the bottom electrodes of the staircase array generates a concurrent input shift, which eliminates the input unfolding, and regeneration required for convolution execution within typical crossbar arrays. Our in-memory compute method operates in charge domain and facilitates high-accuracy floating-point computations with low RRAM states, device requirement. This work provides a path toward fast hardware accelerators that use low power and low area.Deep reinforcement learning (DRL) is a machine learning method based on rewards, which can be extended to solve some complex and realistic decision-making problems. Autonomous driving needs to deal with a variety of complex and changeable traffic scenarios, so the application of DRL in autonomous driving presents a broad application prospect. In this article, an end-to-end autonomous driving policy learning method based on DRL is proposed. On the basis of proximal policy optimization (PPO), we combine a curiosity-driven method called recurrent neural network (RNN) to generate an intrinsic reward signal to encounter the agent to explore its environment, which improves the efficiency of exploration. We introduce an auxiliary critic network on the original actor-critic framework and choose the lower estimate which is predicted by the dual critic network when the network update to avoid the overestimation bias. We test our method on the lane- keeping task and overtaking task in the open racing car simulator (TORCS) driving simulator and compare with other DRL methods, experimental results show that our proposed method can improve the training efficiency and control performance in driving tasks.The rapid growth in wearable biosensing devices is pushed by the strong desire to monitor the human health data and to predict the disease at an early stage. Different sensors are developed to monitor various biomarkers through wearable and implantable sensing patches. Temperature sensor has proved to be an important physiological parameter amongst the various wearable biosensing patches. This paper highlights the recent progresses made in printing of functional nanomaterials for developing wearable temperature sensors on polymeric substrates. A special focus is given to the advanced functional nanomaterials as well as their deposition through printing technologies. The geometric resolutions, shape, physical and electrical characteristics as well as sensing properties using different materials are compared and summarized. Adenosine Cyclophosphate solubility dmso Wearability is the main concern of these newly developed sensors, which is summarized by discussing representative examples. Finally, the challenges concerning the stability, repeatability, reliability, sensitivity, linearity, ageing and large scale manufacturing are discussed with future outlook of the wearable systems in general.Optical pulse detection photoplethysmography (PPG) provides a means of low cost and unobtrusive physiological monitoring that is popular in many wearable devices. However, the accuracy, robustness and generalizability of single-wavelength PPG sensing are sensitive to biological characteristics as well as sensor configuration and placement; this is significant given the increasing adoption of single-wavelength wrist-worn PPG devices in clinical studies and healthcare. Since different wavelengths interact with the skin to varying degrees, researchers have explored the use of multi-wavelength PPG to improve sensing accuracy, robustness and generalizability. This paper contributes a novel and comprehensive state-of-the-art review of wearable multi-wavelength PPG sensing, encompassing motion artifact reduction and estimation of physiological parameters. The paper also encompasses theoretical details about multi-wavelength PPG sensing and the effects of biological characteristics. The review findings highlight the promising developments in motion artifact reduction using multi-wavelength approaches, the effects of skin temperature on PPG sensing, the need for improved diversity in PPG sensing studies and the lack of studies that investigate the combined effects of factors. Recommendations are made for the standardization and completeness of reporting in terms of study design, sensing technology and participant characteristics.The performance of a convolutional neural network (CNN) based face recognition model largely relies on the richness of labeled training data. However, it is expensive to collect a training set with large variations of a face identity under different poses and illumination changes, so the diversity of within-class face images becomes a critical issue in practice. In this paper, we propose a 3D model-assisted domain-transferred face augmentation network (DotFAN) that can generate a series of variants of an input face based on the knowledge distilled from existing rich face datasets of other domains. Extending from StarGAN's architecture, DotFAN integrates with two additional subnetworks, i.e., face expert model (FEM) and face shape regressor (FSR), for latent facial code control. While FSR aims to extract face attributes, FEM is designed to capture a face identity. With their aid, DotFAN can separately learn facial feature codes and effectively generate face images of various facial attributes while keeping the identity of augmented faces unaltered. Experiments show that DotFAN is beneficial for augmenting small face datasets to improve their within-class diversity so that a better face recognition model can be learned from the augmented dataset.Knowledge graph embedding models have gained significant attention in AI research. The aim of knowledge graph embedding is to embed the graphs into a vector space in which the structure of the graph is preserved. Recent works have shown that the inclusion of background knowledge, such as logical rules, can improve the performance of embeddings in downstream machine learning tasks. However, so far, most existing models do not allow the inclusion of rules. We address the challenge of including rules and present a new neural based embedding model (LogicENN). We prove that LogicENN can learn every ground truth of encoded rules in a knowledge graph. To the best of our knowledge, this has not been proved so far for the neural based family of embedding models. Moreover, we derive formulae for the inclusion of various rules, including (anti-)symmetric, inverse, irreflexive and transitive, implication, composition, equivalence, and negation. Our formulation allows avoiding grounding for implication and equivalence relations.