359 research outputs found
Educational Usage of Mobile Devices: Differences Between Postgraduate and Undergraduate Students
The rapid increase of smartphone usage in recent years has provided students the opportunity to participate in mobile learning (m-learning) anywhere, anytime. Academic institutions are also following this trend to launch many m-learning services. This article investigates the differences of the user needs between undergraduate (UG) and postgraduate (PG) students though an online survey with 140 Library Information Systems (LIS) subjects in a Japanese university in order to provide solid foundations for future m-learning studies. We find that UG and PG students do not show significant differences in adopting m-learning by smartphones despite the fact that they have different learning patterns. The m-learning frequencies of smartphones generally range from weekly to monthly, where using search engines is the most frequent, and reading academic resources is the least frequent. They tend to use these services for handling their daily routines (such as search engine, social networks) rather than their academic activities (such as using online databases to search for academic materials). Further, the results also show that content displaying issues (e.g., small display screen, text unable to enlarge) are barriers for most subjects in using these m-learning services
Stereotactic Electroencephalography (SEEG)
Drug resistant epilepsy (DRE) is not an uncommon clinical condition. DRE could cause disabling seizures and even sudden unexpected death in epilepsy (SUDEP). Pre-surgical evaluation is necessary to for surgical treatment to cure or palliative epilepsy. If feasible, surgical excision of an epileptic focus provides the best chance of cure. However, the standard non-invasive workup could not always identify the epileptic focus. Stereotactic EEG (SEEG) is an invasive EEG that could provide the spatial and temporal progression of epileptic discharge so that we could localize or lateralise the epileptic focus more easily. This chapter aims to illustrate the principle of SEEG, the methods of SEEG electrode insertion, the usual white matter tract pathway that epileptic discharge progresses. It also discusses the therapeutic use of SEEG in lesioning with radiofrequency ablation (RFA), as well as the future potential as part of the brain-computer interface (BCI)
Protecting NeRFs' Copyright via Plug-And-Play Watermarking Base Model
Neural Radiance Fields (NeRFs) have become a key method for 3D scene
representation. With the rising prominence and influence of NeRF, safeguarding
its intellectual property has become increasingly important. In this paper, we
propose \textbf{NeRFProtector}, which adopts a plug-and-play strategy to
protect NeRF's copyright during its creation. NeRFProtector utilizes a
pre-trained watermarking base model, enabling NeRF creators to embed binary
messages directly while creating their NeRF. Our plug-and-play property ensures
NeRF creators can flexibly choose NeRF variants without excessive
modifications. Leveraging our newly designed progressive distillation, we
demonstrate performance on par with several leading-edge neural rendering
methods. Our project is available at:
\url{https://qsong2001.github.io/NeRFProtector}.Comment: Accepted by ECCV202
CopyRNeRF: Protecting the CopyRight of Neural Radiance Fields
Neural Radiance Fields (NeRF) have the potential to be a major representation
of media. Since training a NeRF has never been an easy task, the protection of
its model copyright should be a priority. In this paper, by analyzing the pros
and cons of possible copyright protection solutions, we propose to protect the
copyright of NeRF models by replacing the original color representation in NeRF
with a watermarked color representation. Then, a distortion-resistant rendering
scheme is designed to guarantee robust message extraction in 2D renderings of
NeRF. Our proposed method can directly protect the copyright of NeRF models
while maintaining high rendering quality and bit accuracy when compared among
optional solutions.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures, accepted by iccv 2023 non-camera-ready versio
Resilient Practical Test-Time Adaptation: Soft Batch Normalization Alignment and Entropy-driven Memory Bank
Test-time domain adaptation effectively adjusts the source domain model to
accommodate unseen domain shifts in a target domain during inference. However,
the model performance can be significantly impaired by continuous distribution
changes in the target domain and non-independent and identically distributed
(non-i.i.d.) test samples often encountered in practical scenarios. While
existing memory bank methodologies use memory to store samples and mitigate
non-i.i.d. effects, they do not inherently prevent potential model degradation.
To address this issue, we propose a resilient practical test-time adaptation
(ResiTTA) method focused on parameter resilience and data quality.
Specifically, we develop a resilient batch normalization with estimation on
normalization statistics and soft alignments to mitigate overfitting and model
degradation. We use an entropy-driven memory bank that accounts for timeliness,
the persistence of over-confident samples, and sample uncertainty for
high-quality data in adaptation. Our framework periodically adapts the source
domain model using a teacher-student model through a self-training loss on the
memory samples, incorporating soft alignment losses on batch normalization. We
empirically validate ResiTTA across various benchmark datasets, demonstrating
state-of-the-art performance
Overview of Radiosurgery for Intracranial Meningiomas
Meningiomas are the second common Central Nervous System (CNS) neoplasm, and are the most common benign intracranial tumor. They approximately constitute up to 30% of all intracranial tumors. They arise from the arachnoidal coverings of brain. Presentation varies and depends on size, number and location of tumors. Symptoms include those related to increased in intracranial pressure, local irritative features including seizure and local pressure effect to eloquent areas, white matter tracts and cranial nerves. Management of meningiomsa is always challenging and multi-disciplinary approaches includes surgery, radiotherapy and possible chemotherapy and immunotherapy. Among radiation therapy treatment, stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS) or stereotactic radiosurgery (SRT) is getting the popularity compared to traditional conformal radiotherapy with comparable tumor control rate
Wrong Turn in Cyberspace: Using ICANN to Route Around the APA and the Constitution
The Internet relies on an underlying centralized hierarchy built into the domain name system (DNS) to control the routing for the vast majority of Internet traffic. At its heart is a single data file, known as the root. Control of the root provides singular power in cyberspace. This Article first describes how the United States government found itself in control of the root. It then describes how, in an attempt to meet concerns that the United States could so dominate an Internet chokepoint, the U. S. Department of Commerce (DoC) summoned into being the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN), a formally private nonprofit California corporation. DoC then signed contracts with ICANN in order to clothe it with most of the U. S. government\u27s power over the DNS, and convinced other parties to recognize ICANN\u27s authority. ICANN then took regulatory actions that the U. S. Department of Commerce was unable or unwilling to make itself, including the imposition on all registrants of Internet addresses of an idiosyncratic set of arbitration rules and procedures that benefit third-party trademark holders. Professor Froomkin then argues that the use of ICANN to regulate in the stead of an executive agency violates fundamental values and policies designed to ensure democratic control over the use of government power, and sets a precedent that risks being expanded into other regulatory activities. He argues that DoC\u27s use of ICANN to make rules either violates the APA\u27s requirement for notice and comment in rulemaking and judicial review, or it violates the Constitution\u27s nondelegation doctrine. Professor Froomkin reviews possible alternatives to ICANN, and ultimately proposes a decentralized structure in which the namespace of the DNS is spread out over a transnational group of policy partners with DoC
Interleukin 10 inhibits pro-inflammatory cytokine responses and killing of Burkholderia pseudomallei.
Melioidosis, caused by Burkholderia pseudomallei, is endemic in northeastern Thailand and Northern Australia. Severe septicemic melioidosis is associated with high levels of pro-inflammatory cytokines and is correlated with poor clinical outcomes. IL-10 is an immunoregulatory cytokine, which in other infections can control the expression of pro-inflammatory cytokines, but its role in melioidosis has not been addressed. Here, whole blood of healthy seropositive individuals (n = 75), living in N. E. Thailand was co-cultured with B. pseudomallei and production of IL-10 and IFN-γ detected and the cellular sources identified. CD3- CD14+ monocytes were the main source of IL-10. Neutralization of IL-10 increased IFN-γ, IL-6 and TNF-α production and improved bacteria killing. IFN-γ production and microbicidal activity were impaired in individuals with diabetes mellitus (DM). In contrast, IL-10 production was unimpaired in individuals with DM, resulting in an IL-10 dominant cytokine balance. Neutralization of IL-10 restored the IFN-γ response of individuals with DM to similar levels observed in healthy individuals and improved killing of B. pseudomallei in vitro. These results demonstrate that monocyte derived IL-10 acts to inhibit potentially protective cell mediated immune responses against B. pseudomallei, but may also moderate the pathological effects of excessive cytokine production during sepsis
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