Diferencia entre revisiones de «KES-2012-Neurocomputing-issue-scope»
(Página creada con «;Title of the special issue: Bioinspired knowledge based techniques in medical image processing ;Acronym: KES medical image ;Definition of issue’s scope: This speci...») |
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Dear Tom, thanks for your kind response, I am thinking about 10 papers. | |||
The specific issue's topic will be the application of bio-inspired | |||
machine learning for the processing of medical information, including | |||
clinical, biochemical and medical image information, with an emphasis in | |||
two venues: (a) circulatory system diseases, i.e. vessel image | |||
processing, and related clinical information, and (b) neurodegenerative | |||
diseases, including Alzheimer's Disease and neuropsychyatric disorders, | |||
involving multimodal brain imaging and related clinical information. The | |||
kind of systems would range from image segmentation, registration and | |||
normalization to computed aided diagnosis systems, brain state decoding | |||
and prediction. Please let me know your views. | |||
Submission deadline: 1st December 2012 | Submission deadline: 1st December 2012 |
Revisión del 22:20 22 oct 2012
- Title of the special issue
- Bioinspired knowledge based techniques in medical image processing
- Acronym
- KES medical image
- Definition of issue’s scope
This special issue identifies the following knowledge related challenges in the current field of pattern recognition:
- - Combining high (semantic) and low level information for pattern recognition.
Such needs appear in apparently unrelated fields like motion understanding, content based image retrieval (CBIR)
- - Combining multi-modal information which can not be subject of conventional
error measures, impeding the application of state-of-the-art error minimization approaches. The sources of information are heterogeneous, and its combination leads to unmeasurable data types. For instance, in the field of biomedical information processing, a wide diversity information sources may be used to reach a diagnosis that can be validated by the human operator.
- - New views on uncertainty, ambiguity and data artifacts (i.e. noise, missing data)
allowing to effectively deal with them in a systematic and integrative way.
These challenges are currently being addressed from a number of points of view. The
development of semantic based pattern recognition systems, able to learn ontologies
from data, even heterogeneous data, as well as of ontology based reasoning allow for
the interplay between high-level semantics and low-level features. Hybrid systems
combining ontologies with fuzzy systems allow introduce uncertain modeling and
reasoning in the semantic domain. Lattice computing approaches allow seamlessly
treatment of heterogeneous data through lattice theory, while allowing new more robust
reasoning process diverging from the conventional statistics framework. Still, despite a
long tradition of research and results, new classification algorithms are being extended
to deal with heterogenous, ambiguous and artifact prone data. Also new ways of
interactive development of systems, such as active learning or reinforcement feedback
approaches can help to improve the efficiency of learning under scarce or expensive
data collection. The special issue invites works on these areas showing the interplay
between high level semantics and low level statistical and bio-inspired data processing
techniques.
- Specific technical topics
- - Ontology reasoning and learning
- - Fuzzy and probabilistic ontologies
- - Lattice computing approaches
- - Knowledge based adaptive approaches
- - Active learning, reinforcement learning in qualitative spaces
- - Advanced classification systems (ensembles, ELM, clustering)
- - Interplay of high level semantics and low level machine learning
- Applications
- - Remote sensing
- - Multimedia information processing
- - Biometrics, such as face recognition
- - Fusion of clinical and medical image information
- - Content based image retrival
- - Multimodal information processing
Dear Tom, thanks for your kind response, I am thinking about 10 papers. The specific issue's topic will be the application of bio-inspired machine learning for the processing of medical information, including clinical, biochemical and medical image information, with an emphasis in two venues: (a) circulatory system diseases, i.e. vessel image processing, and related clinical information, and (b) neurodegenerative diseases, including Alzheimer's Disease and neuropsychyatric disorders, involving multimodal brain imaging and related clinical information. The kind of systems would range from image segmentation, registration and normalization to computed aided diagnosis systems, brain state decoding and prediction. Please let me know your views.
Submission deadline: 1st December 2012