Publications by authors named "Zubaer Ibna Mannan"

Humans experience a variety of emotions throughout the course of their daily lives, including happiness, sadness, and rage. As a result, an effective emotion identification system is essential for electroencephalography (EEG) data to accurately reflect emotion in real-time. Although recent studies on this problem can provide acceptable performance measures, it is still not adequate for the implementation of a complete emotion recognition system.

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Interpretation of medical images with a computer-aided diagnosis (CAD) system is arduous because of the complex structure of cancerous lesions in different imaging modalities, high degree of resemblance between inter-classes, presence of dissimilar characteristics in intra-classes, scarcity of medical data, and presence of artifacts and noises. In this study, these challenges are addressed by developing a shallow convolutional neural network (CNN) model with optimal configuration performing ablation study by altering layer structure and hyper-parameters and utilizing a suitable augmentation technique. Eight medical datasets with different modalities are investigated where the proposed model, named MNet-10, with low computational complexity is able to yield optimal performance across all datasets.

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Nuclei segmentation and classification of hematoxylin and eosin-stained histology images is a challenging task due to a variety of issues, such as color inconsistency that results from the non-uniform manual staining operations, clustering of nuclei, and blurry and overlapping nuclei boundaries. Existing approaches involve segmenting nuclei by drawing their polygon representations or by measuring the distances between nuclei centroids. In contrast, we leverage the fact that morphological features (appearance, shape, and texture) of nuclei in a tissue vary greatly depending upon the tissue type.

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In this paper, a memristive artificial neural circuit imitating the excitatory chemical synaptic transmission of biological synapse is designed. The proposed memristor-based neural circuit exhibits synaptic plasticity, one of the important neurochemical foundations for learning and memory, which is demonstrated via the efficient imitation of short-term facilitation and long-term potentiation. Moreover, the memristive artificial circuit also mimics the distinct biological attributes of strong stimulation and deficient synthesis of neurotransmitters.

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