scholarly journals Exploiting the Symmetry of Integral Transforms for Featuring Anuran Calls

Symmetry ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 11 (3) ◽  
pp. 405 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amalia Luque ◽  
Jesús Gómez-Bellido ◽  
Alejandro Carrasco ◽  
Julio Barbancho

The application of machine learning techniques to sound signals requires the previous characterization of said signals. In many cases, their description is made using cepstral coefficients that represent the sound spectra. In this paper, the performance in obtaining cepstral coefficients by two integral transforms, Discrete Fourier Transform (DFT) and Discrete Cosine Transform (DCT), are compared in the context of processing anuran calls. Due to the symmetry of sound spectra, it is shown that DCT clearly outperforms DFT, and decreases the error representing the spectrum by more than 30%. Additionally, it is demonstrated that DCT-based cepstral coefficients are less correlated than their DFT-based counterparts, which leads to a significant advantage for DCT-based cepstral coefficients if these features are later used in classification algorithms. Since the DCT superiority is based on the symmetry of sound spectra and not on any intrinsic advantage of the algorithm, the conclusions of this research can definitely be extrapolated to include any sound signal.

Software engineering is an important area that deals with development and maintenance of software. After developing a software, it is always important to track its performance. One has to always see whether the software functions according to customer requirements. To ensure this, faulty and non- faulty modules must be identified. For this purpose, one can make use of a model for binary class classification of faults. Different technique's outputs differ in one or the other way with respect to the following: fault dataset used, complexity, classification algorithm implemented, etc. Various machine learning techniques can be used for this purpose. But this paper deals with the best classification algorithms available till date and they are decision tree, random forest, naive bayes and logistic regression (tree-based techniques and bayesian based techniques). The motive behind developing such a project is to identify the faulty modules within a software before the actual software testing takes place. As a result, the time consumed by testers or the workload of the testers can be reduced to an extent. This work is very well useful to those working in software industry and also to those people carrying out research in software engineering where the lifecycle of development of a software is discussed.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Cao Truong Tran

<p>Classification is a major task in machine learning and data mining. Many real-world datasets suffer from the unavoidable issue of missing values. Classification with incomplete data has to be carefully handled because inadequate treatment of missing values will cause large classification errors.    Existing most researchers working on classification with incomplete data focused on improving the effectiveness, but did not adequately address the issue of the efficiency of applying the classifiers to classify unseen instances, which is much more important than the act of creating classifiers. A common approach to classification with incomplete data is to use imputation methods to replace missing values with plausible values before building classifiers and classifying unseen instances. This approach provides complete data which can be then used by any classification algorithm, but sophisticated imputation methods are usually computationally intensive, especially for the application process of classification. Another approach to classification with incomplete data is to build a classifier that can directly work with missing values. This approach does not require time for estimating missing values, but it often generates inaccurate and complex classifiers when faced with numerous missing values. A recent approach to classification with incomplete data which also avoids estimating missing values is to build a set of classifiers which then is used to select applicable classifiers for classifying unseen instances. However, this approach is also often inaccurate and takes a long time to find applicable classifiers when faced with numerous missing values.   The overall goal of the thesis is to simultaneously improve the effectiveness and efficiency of classification with incomplete data by using evolutionary machine learning techniques for feature selection, clustering, ensemble learning, feature construction and constructing classifiers.   The thesis develops approaches for improving imputation for classification with incomplete data by integrating clustering and feature selection with imputation. The approaches improve both the effectiveness and the efficiency of using imputation for classification with incomplete data.   The thesis develops wrapper-based feature selection methods to improve input space for classification algorithms that are able to work directly with incomplete data. The methods not only improve the classification accuracy, but also reduce the complexity of classifiers able to work directly with incomplete data.   The thesis develops a feature construction method to improve input space for classification algorithms with incomplete data by proposing interval genetic programming-genetic programming with a set of interval functions. The method improves the classification accuracy and reduces the complexity of classifiers.   The thesis develops an ensemble approach to classification with incomplete data by integrating imputation, feature selection, and ensemble learning. The results show that the approach is more accurate, and faster than previous common methods for classification with incomplete data.   The thesis develops interval genetic programming to directly evolve classifiers for incomplete data. The results show that classifiers generated by interval genetic programming can be more effective and efficient than classifiers generated the combination of imputation and traditional genetic programming. Interval genetic programming is also more effective than common classification algorithms able to work directly with incomplete data.    In summary, the thesis develops a range of approaches for simultaneously improving the effectiveness and efficiency of classification with incomplete data by using a range of evolutionary machine learning techniques.</p>


Complexity ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 2019 ◽  
pp. 1-10 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rafael Vega Vega ◽  
Héctor Quintián ◽  
Carlos Cambra ◽  
Nuño Basurto ◽  
Álvaro Herrero ◽  
...  

Present research proposes the application of unsupervised and supervised machine-learning techniques to characterize Android malware families. More precisely, a novel unsupervised neural-projection method for dimensionality-reduction, namely, Beta Hebbian Learning (BHL), is applied to visually analyze such malware. Additionally, well-known supervised Decision Trees (DTs) are also applied for the first time in order to improve characterization of such families and compare the original features that are identified as the most important ones. The proposed techniques are validated when facing real-life Android malware data by means of the well-known and publicly available Malgenome dataset. Obtained results support the proposed approach, confirming the validity of BHL and DTs to gain deep knowledge on Android malware.


2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (5) ◽  
pp. 4624-4627

In recent years, a lot of data has been generated about students, which can be utilized for deciding the career path of the student. This paper discusses some of the machine learning techniques which can be used to predict the performance of a student and help to decide his/her career path. Some of the key Machine Learning (ML) algorithms applied in our research work are Linear Regression, Logistics Regression, Support Vector machine, Naïve Bayes Classifier and K- means Clustering. The aim of this paper is to predict the student career path using Machine Learning algorithms. We compare the efficiencies of different ML classification algorithms on a real dataset obtained from University students.


Advancement in medical science has always been one of the most vital aspects of the human race. With the progress in technology, the use of modern techniques and equipment is always imposed on treatment purposes. Nowadays, machine learning techniques have widely been used in medical science for assuring accuracy. In this work, we have constructed computational model building techniques for liver disease prediction accurately. We used some efficient classification algorithms: Random Forest, Perceptron, Decision Tree, K-Nearest Neighbors (KNN), and Support Vector Machine (SVM) for predicting liver diseases. Our works provide the implementation of hybrid model construction and comparative analysis for improving prediction performance. At first, classification algorithms are applied to the original liver patient datasets collected from the UCI repository. Then we analyzed features and tweaked to improve the performance of our predictor and made a comparative analysis among the classifiers. We examined that, KNN algorithm outperformed all other techniques with feature selection.


2019 ◽  
Vol 6 (4) ◽  
pp. 739-747 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jong‐Won Chung ◽  
Yoon‐Chul Kim ◽  
Jihoon Cha ◽  
Eun‐Hyeok Choi ◽  
Byung Moon Kim ◽  
...  

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