2020
Authors
Pinheiro, R; Barroso, J; Rocha, T;
Publication
DSAI 2020: 9th International Conference on Software Development and Technologies for Enhancing Accessibility and Fighting Info-exclusion, Virtual Event, Portugal, December 2-4, 2020.
Abstract
When something is written regarding the need of accessibility, the authors typically put the emphasis in how it is something valuable for the people with disabilities (PwD) that need that accessibility in the first place in order to become included in the society; others follow the more debatable via of the human rights or the strive for a more humanist and inclusive society, even if such accessibility provision ends being legally enforced. Any benefits to non-PwD are usually seen as secondary effects due to PwDs becoming more autonomous or needing less support once the accessibility occurs to some extent. This article drives in a different direction, exposing direct benefits to the non-PwD when the world is more accessible, even when no actual PwD is needing any accessibility. For that purpose, examples are presented with non-PwD being benefited rather than PwD due to accessibilities that were thought to serve only for the PwD.
2020
Authors
Vinagre, J; Moniz, N;
Publication
Revista de Ciência Elementar
Abstract
2020
Authors
Costa, J; Silva, C; Antunes, M; Ribeiro, B;
Publication
NEURAL COMPUTING & APPLICATIONS
Abstract
Many text classification problems in social networks, and other contexts, are also dynamic problems, where concepts drift through time, and meaningful labels are dynamic. In Twitter-based applications in particular, ensembles are often applied to problems that fit this description, for example sentiment analysis or adapting to drifting circumstances. While it can be straightforward to request different classifiers' input on such ensembles, our goal is to boost dynamic ensembles by combining performance metrics as efficiently as possible. We present a twofold performance-based framework to classify incoming tweets based on recent tweets. On the one hand, individual ensemble classifiers' performance is paramount in defining their contribution to the ensemble. On the other hand, examples are actively selected based on their ability to effectively contribute to the performance in classifying drifting concepts. The main step of the algorithm uses different performance metrics to determine both each classifier strength in the ensemble and each example importance, and hence lifetime, in the learning process. We demonstrate, on a drifted benchmark dataset, that our framework drives the classification performance considerably up for it to make a difference in a variety of applications.
2020
Authors
Machado, M; Ferreira, CA; Pedrosa, J; Negrao, E; Rebelo, J; Leitao, P; Carvalho, AS; Rodrigues, MC; Ramos, I; Cunha, A; Campilho, A;
Publication
XV MEDITERRANEAN CONFERENCE ON MEDICAL AND BIOLOGICAL ENGINEERING AND COMPUTING - MEDICON 2019
Abstract
The lung cancer diagnosis is based on the search of lung nodules. Besides its characterization, it is also common to register the anatomical position of these findings. Even though computed-aided diagnosis systems tend to help in these tasks, there is still lacking a complete system that can qualitatively label the nodules in lung regions. In this way, this paper proposes an automatic lung reference model to facilitate the report of nodules between computed-aided diagnosis systems and the radiologist, and among radiologists. The model was applied to 115 computed tomography scans with manually and automatically segmented lobes, and the obtained sectors' variability was evaluated. As the sectors average variability within lobes is less or equal to 0.14, the model can be a good way to promote the report of lung nodules.
2020
Authors
Ferreira, ML; Ferreira, JC;
Publication
JOURNAL OF SIGNAL PROCESSING SYSTEMS FOR SIGNAL IMAGE AND VIDEO TECHNOLOGY
Abstract
In future wireless communication systems, several radio access technologies will coexist and interwork to provide a great variety of services with different requirements. Thus, the design of flexible and reconfigurable hardware is a relevant topic in wireless communications. The combination of high performance, programmability and flexibility makes Field-programmable gate array a convenient platform to design such systems, especially for base stations. This paper describes a dynamically reconfigurable baseband modulator for Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing and Filter-bank Multicarrier modulation waveforms implemented on a Virtex-7 board. The design features Dynamic Partial Reconfiguration (DPR) capabilities to adapt its mode of operation at run-time and is compared with a functionally equivalent static multi-mode design regarding processing throughput, resource utilization, functional density and power consumption. The DPR-based design implementation reserves about half the resources used by static multi-mode counterpart. Consequently, the baseband processing dynamic power consumption observed in the DPR-based design is between 26 mW to 90 mW lower than in the static multi-mode design, representing a dynamic power reduction between 13% to 52%. The worst-case DPR latency measured was 1.051 ms, while the DPR energy overhead is below 1.5 mJ. Considering latency requirements for modern wireless standards and power consumption constraints for commercial base stations, the DPR application is shown to be valuable in multi-standard and multi-mode systems, as well as in scenarios such as multiple-input and multiple-output or dynamic spectrum aggregation.
2020
Authors
Sekerinski, E; Moreira, N; Oliveira, JN; Ratiu, D; Guidotti, R; Farrell, M; Luckcuck, M; Marmsoler, D; Campos, J; Astarte, T; Gonnord, L; Cerone, A; Couto, L; Dongol, B; Kutrib, M; Monteiro, P; Delmas, D;
Publication
FM Workshops (1)
Abstract
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