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A critical role of intraspecific host variation in pathogen community structure

Hippocampal Place Cells - our inner GPS

When machine-learning takes over healthcare in studying respiratory behaviors
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When machine-learning takes over healthcare in studying respiratory behaviors

bioxone November 10, 2020November 10, 2020

-Camelia Bhattacharyya, Amity University Kolkata

Dave Waters once said, “A baby learns to crawl, walk and then run. We are in the crawling stage when it comes to applying machine learning”. This professor or scientist and researcher also said, “Machine learning will automate jobs that most people thought could only be done by people”. The present scenario has established the reality of these two lines beautifully and smartly. Artificial intelligence (AI) has not only taken over agriculture, sports, and vehicles but also other areas like the medical field. Recent studies have shown its application in determining even the respiratory behaviors of the patients.  

What if we could continuously monitor the respiratory behaviors? Since the currently used techniques have proved themselves inefficient to accurately distinguish different disorders related to the lungs, AI has somehow managed to show some positivity in this field to make detection easy. The detection is based on different postures. The sensors are attached between the xiphoid process and the costal margin and the position is a centimeter above the umbilicus. These sensors due to the presence of ultrasound emitter, wireless transmitter ultrasound receiver, and data acquisition, can accurately extract different data of the temporal respiratory behavior and store them in a laptop. These sensors are not only accurate and lightweight but also can detect different respiratory disorders like asthma, chronic respiratory obstructive disease (COPD), apnea, etc at the starting stage and regularly for better treatment and cure.

AI has does prove to be an efficient research area in every field, making life easier and safer than ever before. 

Also read: A critical role of intraspecific host variation in pathogen community structure

SOURCE: Ang Chen, Jianwei Zhang, Liangkai Zhao, Rachel Diane Rhoades, Dong-Yun Kim, Ning Wu, Jianming Liang, Junseok Chae. Machine-learning enabled wireless wearable sensors to study the individuality of respiratory behaviors. (2020). https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bios.2020.112799 

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Tagged accurate AI apnea asthma COPD costal margin detection Machine Learning monitor patients respiratory behavior sensors ultrasound emitter xiphoid process

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Hippocampal Place Cells - our inner GPS

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