Human monkeypox is a very unusual virus that can devastate society. Early identification and diagnosis are essential to treat and manage an illness effectively. Human monkeypox disease detection using deep learning models has attracted increasing attention recently. The virus that causes monkeypox may be passed to people, making it a zoonotic illness. The latest monkeypox epidemic has hit more than 40 nations. Computer-assisted approaches using Deep Learning techniques for automatically identifying skin lesions have shown to be a viable alternative in light of the fast proliferation and ever-growing problems of supplying PCR (Polymerase Chain Reaction) Testing in places with limited availability. In this research, we introduce a deep learning model for detecting human monkeypoxes that is accurate and resilient by tuning its hyper-parameters. We employed a mixture of convolutional neural networks and transfer learning strategies to extract characteristics from medical photos and properly identify them. We also used hyperparameter optimization strategies to fine-tune the Model and get the best possible results. This paper proposes a Yolov5 model-based method for differentiating between chickenpox and Monkeypox lesions on skin pictures. The Roboflow skin lesion picture dataset was subjected to three different hyperparameter tuning strategies: the SDG optimizer, the Bayesian optimizer, and Learning without Forgetting. The proposed Model had the highest classification accuracy (98.18%) when applied to photos of monkeypox skin lesions. Our findings show that the suggested Model surpasses the current best-in-class models and may be used in clinical settings for actual Human Monkeypox disease detection and diagnosis.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-43236-1 | DOI Listing |
Int J Comput Assist Radiol Surg
January 2025
Advanced Medical Devices Laboratory, Kyushu University, Nishi-ku, Fukuoka, 819-0382, Japan.
Purpose: This paper presents a deep learning approach to recognize and predict surgical activity in robot-assisted minimally invasive surgery (RAMIS). Our primary objective is to deploy the developed model for implementing a real-time surgical risk monitoring system within the realm of RAMIS.
Methods: We propose a modified Transformer model with the architecture comprising no positional encoding, 5 fully connected layers, 1 encoder, and 3 decoders.
Bioinformatics
January 2025
Biocomputing Group, University of Bologna, Italy.
Motivation: The knowledge of protein stability upon residue variation is an important step for functional protein design and for understanding how protein variants can promote disease onset. Computational methods are important to complement experimental approaches and allow a fast screening of large datasets of variations.
Results: In this work we present DDGemb, a novel method combining protein language model embeddings and transformer architectures to predict protein ΔΔG upon both single- and multi-point variations.
J Orthop Surg Res
January 2025
Department of Human Anatomy, Graduate School, Inner Mongolia Medical University, Hohhot, 010010, Inner Mongolia, China.
Purpose: The study aimed to develop a deep learning model for rapid, automated measurement of full-spine X-rays in adolescents with Adolescent Idiopathic Scoliosis (AIS). A significant challenge in this field is the time-consuming nature of manual measurements and the inter-individual variability in these measurements. To address these challenges, we utilized RTMpose deep learning technology to automate the process.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMC Bioinformatics
January 2025
College of Artificial Intelligence, Nanjing Agricultural University, Weigang No.1, Nanjing, 210095, Jiangsu, China.
Antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) have been widely recognized as a promising solution to combat antimicrobial resistance of microorganisms due to the increasing abuse of antibiotics in medicine and agriculture around the globe. In this study, we propose UniAMP, a systematic prediction framework for discovering AMPs. We observe that feature vectors used in various existing studies constructed from peptide information, such as sequence, composition, and structure, can be augmented and even replaced by information inferred by deep learning models.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCommun Biol
January 2025
Institute for Automation and Applied Informatics, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Eggenstein-Leopoldshafen, Germany.
Biomedical research increasingly relies on three-dimensional (3D) cell culture models and artificial-intelligence-based analysis can potentially facilitate a detailed and accurate feature extraction on a single-cell level. However, this requires for a precise segmentation of 3D cell datasets, which in turn demands high-quality ground truth for training. Manual annotation, the gold standard for ground truth data, is too time-consuming and thus not feasible for the generation of large 3D training datasets.
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