Low-energy Scheduling Algorithms for Wearable Fall Pre-impact Detection System M.N. Nyan, Francis E.H. Tay, D Guo, L Xu, K.L. Yap, L.K. Goh, B. Veeravalli Pages: 1-7
ABSTRACT: In this paper, novel low-energy static and dynamic
scheduling algorithms with low computational
complexities for heterogeneous multiprocessor systems
are proposed. Since battery life of the system plays a
critical role in wearable embedded systems, the
algorithms are useful for energy consumption reduction in
Body Area Network (BAN)-based wearable
multiprocessor systems in healthcare applications. Our
developed BAN-based fall pre-impact detection system is
used in this investigation. Based on simulation results
using the algorithms, it is found that the battery life can be
extended up to 41.6 percent more of its normal life
without the algorithms.
A Project-Centric Course on Cyberinfrastructure to Support High School STEM Education Daphne Rainey, Lisa Coyne, Jason Gibson, Stephen Cammer, Julie Schulman, Betsy Tretola, Oswald Crasta Pages: 8-13
ABSTRACT: Recent rapid advances in information technology pose
new challenges for teachers in the Science, Technology,
Engineering, and Mathematics (STEM) fields to
incorporate the latest knowledge and technical expertise
into courses in a way that will be applicable to students as
future scientists. A demonstration project was designed,
developed, and deployed by university faculty and high
school teachers for their students to explore the use of the
components of cyberinfrastructure. The project explored
the introduction of cyberinfrastructure through the use of
bioinformatics and the use of team science. This paper
describes the high school course that was deployed at
Galileo Magnet High School (GMHS) in collaboration
with the scientists at Virginia Tech University, and
details its overall assessment. Implementation of a
project-centric teaching paradigm to engage students in
applying the concepts of cyberinfrastructure by
integrating the disciplines of biology, computer science,
mathematics, and statistics through bioinformatics was an
integral part of this study.
A Biomedical Computation Revealed that an Extra-Systolic Heartbeat Exhibits a
Lower Scaling Exponent: DFA as a Beneficial Biomedical Tool Toru Yazawa, Tomoo Katsuyama Pages: 14-18
ABSTRACT: We made our own DFA (detrended fluctuation analysis)
program. We applied it for checking characteristics for
the heartbeat of various individuals. Healthy subjects
showed a normal scaling exponent, which is near 1.0
(ranging 0.9 to 1.19 in our own temporary guideline).
This is in agreement with the original report by Peng et
al. long time ago. In the present study, we investigated
the person who has an extra-systole heartbeat, and
revealed that their arrhythmic heartbeat exhibited a low
scaling exponent (around 0.7). Alternans, which is the
heart beating in period-2 rhythms, exhibited a much low
scaling exponent (around 0.6). We may conclude that if
it would be possible to make a device that equips a DFA
program, it might be useful to check the heart condition,
and contribute not only in nonlinear physics but also in
biomedical fields; especially as a device for health
check, which is applicable for people who are spending
an ordinary life, before they get seriously heart sick.
Complete Platform for Remote Health Management Bozena Kaminska, Yindar Chuo, Marcin Marzencki, Benny Hung, Camille Jaggernauth, Kouhyar Tavakolian, Philip Lin Pages: 19-24
ABSTRACT: Practical usability of the majority of the current
wearable body sensor systems for multiple parameter
physiological signal acquisition is limited by the multiple
physical connections between the sensors and the data
acquisition modules. In order to improve the user comfort and
enable the use of this type of systems on active mobile subjects,
we propose a wireless body sensor system that incorporates
multiple sensors on a single node. This multi-sensor node
includes signal acquisition, processing, and wireless data
transmission fitted on multiple layers of a thin flexible
substrate with very small footprint. Considerations for design
include size, form factor, reliable body attachment, good signal
coupling, and user convenience. The prototype device measures
55mm by 15mm and is 3mm thick. The unit is attached to the
patient’s chest, and is capable of performing simultaneous
measurements of parameters such as body motion, activityintensity,
tilt, respiration, cardiac vibration, cardiac potential
(ECG), heart-rate, body surface temperature. In this paper, we
discuss the architecture of this system, including the multisensor
hardware, the firmware, a mobile phone receiver unit,
and assembly of the first prototype.
The Prediction of Tertiary Structure of RNA Based upon Secondary Structure by
Using the Relaxation Method and Texture Mapping Method C.C. Lin, R.C.T. Lee Pages: 25-33
ABSTRACT: In this paper, we propose a method to predict
tertiary structure of an RNA sequence. Our
prediction method would first find the
secondary structure of the given RNA
sequence. We then use the relaxation method
to predict the 3-space structure of it.
Experimental results show that our method is
quite feasible. We tested our approach on 731
RNA’s. 179 of them got a complete match, 391
of them got 90% match and 161 of them got
80% match.
Delivering Chronic Heart Failure Telemanagement via Multiple
Interactive Platforms Joseph Finkelstein, Jeffrey Wood Pages: 34-39
ABSTRACT: Existing telemonitoring systems provide limited
support in implementing personalized treatment
plans. We developed a Home Automated
Telemanagement (HAT) system for patients with
congestive heart failure (CHF) to provide
support in following individualized treatment
plans as well as to monitor symptoms, weight
changes, and quality of life, while educating the
patient on their disease. The system was
developed for both a laptop computer and a
Nintendo Wii. The system is designed to be
placed in the patient’s home and to communicate
all patient data to a central server implementing
real-time clinical decision support. The system
questions the patient daily on their condition,
monitors their weight, and provides the patient
with instant feedback on their condition in the
form of a 3-zone CHF action plan. Their
medication regimen and suggested actions are
determined by their care management team and
integrated into the system, keeping a
personalized approach to disease management
while taking advantage of the technology
available. The systems are designed to be as
simple as possible, making it usable by patients
with no prior computer or videogame experience.
A feasibility assessment in African American
patients with CHF and without prior computer or
videogame experience demonstrated high level
of acceptance of the CHF HAT laptop and Wii
systems.
Keywords: telem
Quantifying Stability Using Frequency Domain Data from Wireless Inertial Measurement Units Stephen Slaughter, Rachel Hales, Cheryl Hinze, Catherine Pfeiffer Pages: 40-43
ABSTRACT: The quantification of gait stability can provide valuable
information when evaluating subjects for age related and
neuromuscular disease changes. Using tri-axial inertial
measurement units (IMU) for acceleration and rotational
data provide a non-linear profile for this type of
movement. As subjects traverse various surfaces
representing decreasing stability, the different phasing of
gait data make comparisons difficult. By converting from
time to frequency domain data, the phase effects can be
ignored, allowing for significant correlations. In this
study, 12 subjects provided gait information over various
surfaces while wearing an IMU. Instabilities were
determined by comparing frequency domain data over
less stable surfaces to frequency domain data of neural
network (NN) models representing the normal gait for
any given participant. Time dependent data from 2 axes
of acceleration and 2 axes of rotation were converted
using a discrete Fourier transform (FFT) algorithm. The
data over less stable surfaces were compared to the
normal gait NN model by averaging the Pearson product
moment correlation (r) values. This provided a method
to quantify the decreased stability. Data showed
progressively decreasing correlation coefficient values as
subjects encountered progressively less stable surface
environments. This methodology has allowed for the
quantification of instability in gait situations for
application in real-time fall prevention situations.
| | Chaotic Inertia Weight Particle Swarm Optimization for PCR
Primer Design Cheng-Huei Yang, Yu-Huei Cheng, Li-Yeh Chuang, Cheng-Hong Yang Pages: 44-49
ABSTRACT: In order to provide feasible primer sets for performing
a polymerase chain reaction (PCR) experiment, many
primer design methods have been proposed. However, the
majority of these methods require a long time to obtain an
optimal solution since large quantities of template DNA
need to be analyzed, and the designed primer sets usually
do not provide a specific PCR product size. In recent
years, particle swarm optimization (PSO) has been
applied to solve many problems and yielded good results.
In this paper, a logistic map is proposed to determine the
value of inertia weight of PSO (CIWPSO) to design
feasible primers. Accuracies for the primer design of the
Homo sapiens RNA binding motif protein 11 (RBM11),
mRNA (NM_144770), and the Homo sapiens G
protein-coupled receptor 78 (GPR78), mRNA
(NM_080819) were calculated. Five hundred runs of PSO
and the CIWPSO primer design method were performed
on different PCR product lengths and the different
methods of calculating the melting temperature. A
comparison of the accuracy results for PSO and CIWPSO
primer design showed that CIWPSO is superior to the
PSO for primer design. The proposed method could
effectively find optimal or near-optimal primer sets.
Effect of Excess Gravitational Force on Cultured Myotubes in Vitro Shigehiro Hashimoto, Haruka Hino, Takeshi Iwagawa Pages: 50-57
ABSTRACT: An effect of an excess gravitational force on cultured
myoblasts has been studied in an experimental system with
centrifugal force in vitro. Mouse myoblasts (C2C12) were
seeded on a culture dish of 35 mm diameter, and cultured in the
Dulbecco’s Modified Eagle’s Medium until the sub-confluent
condition. To apply the excess gravitational force on the
cultured cells, the dish was set in a conventional centrifugal
machine. Constant gravitational force was applied to the
cultured cells for three hours. Variations were made on the
gravitational force (6 G, 10 G, 100 G, 500 G, and 800 G) with
control of the rotational speed of the rotator in the centrifugal
machine. Morphology of the cells was observed with a phasecontrast
microscope for eight days. The experimental results
show that the myotube thickens day by day after the exposure
to the excess gravitational force field. The results also show
that the higher excess gravitational force thickens myotubes.
The microscopic study shows that myotubes thicken with
fusion each other.
GEGEINTOOL: A Computer-Based Tool for Automated Analysis of
Gene-Gene Interactions in Large Epidemiological Studies in
Cardiovascular Genomics Oscar Coltell, José M. Ordovás, Carmen Saiz, Manuel Forner, Francisco Gabriel, Dolores Corella Pages: 58-61
ABSTRACT: Current methods of data analysis of gene-gene
interactions in complex diseases, after taking into account
environmental factors using traditional approaches, are
inefficient. High-throughput methods of analysis in large
scale studies including thousands of subjects and
hundreds of SNPs should be implemented. We developed
an integrative computer tool, GEGEINTOOL (GEne-
GEne INTeraction tOOL), for large-scale analysis of
gene-gene interactions, in human studies of complex
diseases including a large number of subjects, SNPs, as
well as environmental factors. That resource uses
standard statistical packages (SPSS, etc.) to build and fit
the gene-gene interaction models by means of syntax
scripts in predicting one or more continuous or
dichotomic phenotypes. Codominant, dominant and
recessive genetic interaction models including control for
covariates are automatically created for each SNP in
order to test the best model. From the standard outputs,
GEGEINTOOL extracts a selected set of parameters
(regression coefficients, p-values, adjusted means, etc.),
and groups them in a single MS Excel Spreadsheet. The
tool allows editing the set of filter parameters, filtering
the selected results depending on p-values, as well as
plotting the selected gene-gene interactions to check
consistency. In conclusion, GEGEINTOOL is a useful
and friendly tool for exploring and identifying gene-gene
interactions in complex diseases.
In vitro and in silico Approaches to the Identification of New Compounds
with Antibacterial Profile Carlos R. Rodrigues, Bruno Leal, Kely N. De Oliveira, Ariane S. S. R. Ferreira, Alice Bernardino, Ricardo J. Nunes, Vitor Ferreira, Maria C. De Souza, Anna C. Cunha, Helena C. Castro Pages: 62-65
ABSTRACT: The emergence of multidrug-resistant bacterial strains is a
world problem that increases the need for new and more
effective antimicrobials. On that purpose, derivatives of cyclic
systems may serve as new leads for discovering new active
molecules. In this work we evaluated the antibacterial profile of
243 molecules derived from the systems thienopyridine,
pyrazolopiridine, quinolone, chalcone, hydrazone and lapachone
against Gram-positive and Gram-negative susceptible and
multiresistant strains also comparing them with antibiotics of
clinical use. Our results showed that among the 243 molecules
tested, only eight derivatives were active with promissing MIC
values (2-64mg/mL). Our theoretical in silico analysis showed
that all active compounds fulfilled Lipinski rule of five
(molecular weight = 344.37–409.24, clogP = 3.15–4.11, nHBA
= 6–7, and nHBD = 2), similarly to commercial drugs as well as
presented better druglikeness values (from -3.68 to 0.12) than
chloramphenicol (-4.61) and linezolid (-4.08). Most of the
active derivatives presented a low in silico toxicity risk profile,
similar to oxacillin, ampicillin, and penicillin G, and even lower
than that observed for chloramphenicol and linezolid.
Theoretically HOMO and the electrostatic protential distribution
may be contributing for this safer profile. This study used
computacional tools and may help to deal with an important
world health problem.
Analysis of CR1 Repeats in the Zebra Finch Genome George E. Liu, Yali Hou, Twain Brown Pages: 66-71
ABSTRACT: Most bird species have smaller genomes and fewer repeats than
mammals. Chicken Repeat 1 (CR1) repeat is one of the most
abundant families of repeats, ranging from ~133,000 to ~187,000
copies accounting for ~50 to ~80% of the interspersed repeats in
the zebra finch and chicken genomes, respectively. CR1 repeats
are believed to have arisen from the retrotransposition of a small
number of master elements, which gave rise to multiple CR1
subfamilies in the chicken. In this study, we performed a global
assessment of the divergence distributions, phylogenies, and
consensus sequences of CR1 repeats in the zebra finch genome.
We identified and validated 34 CR1 subfamilies and further
analyzed the correlation between these subfamilies. We also
discovered 4 novel lineage-specific CR1 subfamilies in the zebra
finch when compared to the chicken genome. We built various
evolutionary trees of these subfamilies and concluded that CR1
repeats may play an important role in reshaping the structure of
bird genomes.
Meta-Classification of Multi-Gene Data
with Alternative Feature Mapping Victor C. Liang, Vincent T. Y. Ng Pages: 72-77
ABSTRACT: In order to overcome the limitation on small size of gene
datasets, many meta-classification methods which
ensemble classifiers from different datasets have been
developed. However, due to discrepancies of the
characteristics among multiple heterogeneous datasets,
the number of common and significant genes is usually
small. Instead of matching common genes between
heterogeneous datasets, we propose a novel solution,
alternative feature mapping approach (AFM), to utilize
related and discriminative gene expressions while not
necessarily having exact matches. Genes in the training
dataset are clustered and mapped to the test dataset as
gene groups. Through analyzing the correlation within
gene groups, significant genes can be matched and
dataset dissimilarity factors can be used as weights for
meta-classification. We conducted experiments
consisting of 10 heterogeneous datasets with different
cancer types and platforms. Our experiments show that
classification performance is greatly improved using
suitable significant genes selected by AFM, and weight
voting method based on AFM provides more reliability
for meta-classification.
Serious Gaming to Improve the Safety of Central Venous Catheter Placement Daniel Katz, Samuel Demaria Pages: 78-81
ABSTRACT: Approximately 5 million central venous catheters (CVCs) are
placed by physicians annually in the United States, with a
complication rate of 15%.1 Guidelines and recommendations
are continually being established and updated regarding CVC
placement.2 While much has been done regarding training the
technical skills of CVC placement using part-task trainers (i.e.,
mannequins), successfully finding and cannulating a central
vein is but one part of the process. In fact, many steps designed
to prevent untoward complications involve non-technical skills
which are perhaps more important in training practitioners to
safely place CVCs.
First in aviation and now in healthcare, practitioners are being
trained in realistic and highly interactive simulated
environments so they can learn not just technical skills , but the
key management and non-technical steps which make their task
safer.3 One modality being used to improve performance is
video gaming simulation, or “serious gaming.” Gaming as a
learning tool is being increasingly utilized in health care fields
and can lead to better skill-based outcomes.4 As such, we have
developed a game based around the placement of CVCs that
will be used as a new teaching modality in a pilot program for
instructing residents in safe CVC placement.
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