Matching Items (15)
Filtering by

Clear all filters

153334-Thumbnail Image.png
Description
Three dimensional (3-D) ultrasound is safe, inexpensive, and has been shown to drastically improve system ease-of-use, diagnostic efficiency, and patient throughput. However, its high computational complexity and resulting high power consumption has precluded its use in hand-held applications.

In this dissertation, algorithm-architecture co-design techniques that aim to make hand-held 3-D ultrasound

Three dimensional (3-D) ultrasound is safe, inexpensive, and has been shown to drastically improve system ease-of-use, diagnostic efficiency, and patient throughput. However, its high computational complexity and resulting high power consumption has precluded its use in hand-held applications.

In this dissertation, algorithm-architecture co-design techniques that aim to make hand-held 3-D ultrasound a reality are presented. First, image enhancement methods to improve signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) are proposed. These include virtual source firing techniques and a low overhead digital front-end architecture using orthogonal chirps and orthogonal Golay codes.

Second, algorithm-architecture co-design techniques to reduce the power consumption of 3-D SAU imaging systems is presented. These include (i) a subaperture multiplexing strategy and the corresponding apodization method to alleviate the signal bandwidth bottleneck, and (ii) a highly efficient iterative delay calculation method to eliminate complex operations such as multiplications, divisions and square-root in delay calculation during beamforming. These techniques were used to define Sonic Millip3De, a 3-D die stacked architecture for digital beamforming in SAU systems. Sonic Millip3De produces 3-D high resolution images at 2 frames per second with system power consumption of 15W in 45nm technology.

Third, a new beamforming method based on separable delay decomposition is proposed to reduce the computational complexity of the beamforming unit in an SAU system. The method is based on minimizing the root-mean-square error (RMSE) due to delay decomposition. It reduces the beamforming complexity of a SAU system by 19x while providing high image fidelity that is comparable to non-separable beamforming. The resulting modified Sonic Millip3De architecture supports a frame rate of 32 volumes per second while maintaining power consumption of 15W in 45nm technology.

Next a 3-D plane-wave imaging system that utilizes both separable beamforming and coherent compounding is presented. The resulting system has computational complexity comparable to that of a non-separable non-compounding baseline system while significantly improving contrast-to-noise ratio and SNR. The modified Sonic Millip3De architecture is now capable of generating high resolution images at 1000 volumes per second with 9-fire-angle compounding.
ContributorsYang, Ming (Author) / Chakrabarti, Chaitali (Thesis advisor) / Papandreou-Suppappola, Antonia (Committee member) / Karam, Lina (Committee member) / Frakes, David (Committee member) / Ogras, Umit Y. (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2015
150537-Thumbnail Image.png
Description
The field of Data Mining is widely recognized and accepted for its applications in many business problems to guide decision-making processes based on data. However, in recent times, the scope of these problems has swollen and the methods are under scrutiny for applicability and relevance to real-world circumstances. At the

The field of Data Mining is widely recognized and accepted for its applications in many business problems to guide decision-making processes based on data. However, in recent times, the scope of these problems has swollen and the methods are under scrutiny for applicability and relevance to real-world circumstances. At the crossroads of innovation and standards, it is important to examine and understand whether the current theoretical methods for industrial applications (which include KDD, SEMMA and CRISP-DM) encompass all possible scenarios that could arise in practical situations. Do the methods require changes or enhancements? As part of the thesis I study the current methods and delineate the ideas of these methods and illuminate their shortcomings which posed challenges during practical implementation. Based on the experiments conducted and the research carried out, I propose an approach which illustrates the business problems with higher accuracy and provides a broader view of the process. It is then applied to different case studies highlighting the different aspects to this approach.
ContributorsAnand, Aneeth (Author) / Liu, Huan (Thesis advisor) / Kempf, Karl G. (Thesis advisor) / Sen, Arunabha (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2012
156504-Thumbnail Image.png
Description
The Internet of Things (IoT) has become a more pervasive part of everyday life. IoT networks such as wireless sensor networks, depend greatly on the limiting unnecessary power consumption. As such, providing low-power, adaptable software can greatly improve network design. For streaming live video content, Wireless Video Sensor Network Platform

The Internet of Things (IoT) has become a more pervasive part of everyday life. IoT networks such as wireless sensor networks, depend greatly on the limiting unnecessary power consumption. As such, providing low-power, adaptable software can greatly improve network design. For streaming live video content, Wireless Video Sensor Network Platform compatible Dynamic Adaptive Streaming over HTTP (WVSNP-DASH) aims to revolutionize wireless segmented video streaming by providing a low-power, adaptable framework to compete with modern DASH players such as Moving Picture Experts Group (MPEG-DASH) and Apple’s Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP) Live Streaming (HLS). Each segment is independently playable, and does not depend on a manifest file, resulting in greatly improved power performance. My work was to show that WVSNP-DASH is capable of further power savings at the level of the wireless sensor node itself if a native capture program is implemented at the camera sensor node. I created a native capture program in the C language that fulfills the name-based segmentation requirements of WVSNP-DASH. I present this program with intent to measure its power consumption on a hardware test-bed in future. To my knowledge, this is the first program to generate WVSNP-DASH playable video segments. The results show that our program could be utilized by WVSNP-DASH, but there are issues with the efficiency, so provided are an additional outline for further improvements.
ContributorsKhan, Zarah (Author) / Reisslein, Martin (Thesis advisor) / Seema, Adolph (Committee member) / Papandreou-Suppappola, Antonia (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2018
154864-Thumbnail Image.png
Description
Social media has become popular in the past decade. Facebook for example has 1.59 billion active users monthly. With such massive social networks generating lot of data, everyone is constantly looking for ways of leveraging the knowledge from social networks to make their systems more personalized to their end users.

Social media has become popular in the past decade. Facebook for example has 1.59 billion active users monthly. With such massive social networks generating lot of data, everyone is constantly looking for ways of leveraging the knowledge from social networks to make their systems more personalized to their end users. And with rapid increase in the usage of mobile phones and wearables, social media data is being tied to spatial networks. This research document proposes an efficient technique that answers socially k-Nearest Neighbors with Spatial Range Filter. The proposed approach performs a joint search on both the social and spatial domains which radically improves the performance compared to straight forward solutions. The research document proposes a novel index that combines social and spatial indexes. In other words, graph data is stored in an organized manner to filter it based on spatial (region of interest) and social constraints (top-k closest vertices) at query time. That leads to pruning necessary paths during the social graph traversal procedure, and only returns the top-K social close venues. The research document then experimentally proves how the proposed approach outperforms existing baseline approaches by at least three times and also compare how each of our algorithms perform under various conditions on a real geo-social dataset extracted from Yelp.
ContributorsPasumarthy, Nitin (Author) / Sarwat, Mohamed (Thesis advisor) / Papotti, Paolo (Committee member) / Sen, Arunabha (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2016
155666-Thumbnail Image.png
Description
Imagine that we have a piece of matter that can change its physical properties like its shape, density, conductivity, or color in a programmable fashion based on either user input or autonomous sensing. This is the vision behind what is commonly known as programmable matter. Envisioning systems of nano-sensors devices,

Imagine that we have a piece of matter that can change its physical properties like its shape, density, conductivity, or color in a programmable fashion based on either user input or autonomous sensing. This is the vision behind what is commonly known as programmable matter. Envisioning systems of nano-sensors devices, programmable matter consists of systems of simple computational elements, called particles, that can establish and release bonds, compute, and can actively move in a self-organized way. In this dissertation the feasibility of solving fundamental problems relevant for programmable matter is investigated. As a model for such self-organizing particle systems (SOPS), the geometric amoebot model is introduced. In this model, particles only have local information and have modest computational power. They achieve locomotion by expanding and contracting, which resembles the behavior of amoeba. Under this model, efficient local-control algorithms for the leader election problem in SOPS are presented. As a central problem for programmable matter, shape formation problems are then studied. The limitations of solving the leader election problem and the shape formation problem on a more general version of the amoebot model are also discussed. The \smart paint" problem is also studied which aims at having the particles self-organize in order to uniformly coat the surface of an object of arbitrary shape and size, forming multiple coating layers if necessary. A Universal Coating algorithm is presented and shown to be asymptotically worst-case optimal both in terms of time with high probability and work. In particular, the algorithm always terminates within a linear number of rounds with high probability. A linear lower bound on the competitive gap between fully local coating algorithms and coating algorithms that rely on global information is presented, which implies that the proposed algorithm is also optimal in a competitive sense. Simulation results show that the competitive ratio of the proposed algorithm may be better than linear in practice. Developed algorithms utilize only local control, require only constant-size memory particles, and are asymptotically optimal in terms of the total number of particle movements needed to reach the desired shape configuration.
ContributorsDerakhshandeh, Zahra (Author) / Richa, Andrea (Thesis advisor) / Sen, Arunabha (Thesis advisor) / Xue, Guoliang (Committee member) / Scheideler, Christian (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2017
187820-Thumbnail Image.png
Description
With the advent of new advanced analysis tools and access to related published data, it is getting more difficult for data owners to suppress private information from published data while still providing useful information. This dual problem of providing useful, accurate information and protecting it at the same time has

With the advent of new advanced analysis tools and access to related published data, it is getting more difficult for data owners to suppress private information from published data while still providing useful information. This dual problem of providing useful, accurate information and protecting it at the same time has been challenging, especially in healthcare. The data owners lack an automated resource that provides layers of protection on a published dataset with validated statistical values for usability. Differential privacy (DP) has gained a lot of attention in the past few years as a solution to the above-mentioned dual problem. DP is defined as a statistical anonymity model that can protect the data from adversarial observation while still providing intended usage. This dissertation introduces a novel DP protection mechanism called Inexact Data Cloning (IDC), which simultaneously protects and preserves information in published data while conveying source data intent. IDC preserves the privacy of the records by converting the raw data records into clonesets. The clonesets then pass through a classifier that removes potential compromising clonesets, filtering only good inexact cloneset. The mechanism of IDC is dependent on a set of privacy protection metrics called differential privacy protection metrics (DPPM), which represents the overall protection level. IDC uses two novel performance values, differential privacy protection score (DPPS) and clone classifier selection percentage (CCSP), to estimate the privacy level of protected data. In support of using IDC as a viable data security product, a software tool chain prototype, differential privacy protection architecture (DPPA), was developed to utilize the IDC. DPPA used the engineering security mechanism of IDC. DPPA is a hub which facilitates a market for data DP security mechanisms. DPPA works by incorporating standalone IDC mechanisms and provides automation, IDC protected published datasets and statistically verified IDC dataset diagnostic report. DPPA is currently doing functional, and operational benchmark processes that quantifies the DP protection of a given published dataset. The DPPA tool was recently used to test a couple of health datasets. The test results further validate the IDC mechanism as being feasible.
Contributorsthomas, zelpha (Author) / Bliss, Daniel W (Thesis advisor) / Papandreou-Suppappola, Antonia (Committee member) / Banerjee, Ayan (Committee member) / Shrivastava, Aviral (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2023
161843-Thumbnail Image.png
Description
In this thesis, the applications of deep learning in the analysis, detection and classification of medical imaging datasets were studied, with a focus on datasets having a limited sample size. A combined machine learning-deep learning model was designed to classify one small dataset, prostate cancer provided by Mayo

In this thesis, the applications of deep learning in the analysis, detection and classification of medical imaging datasets were studied, with a focus on datasets having a limited sample size. A combined machine learning-deep learning model was designed to classify one small dataset, prostate cancer provided by Mayo Clinic, Arizona. Deep learning model was implemented to extract imaging features followed by machine learning classifier for prostate cancer diagnosis. The results were compared against models trained on texture-based features, namely gray level co-occurrence matrix (GLCM) and Gabor. Some of the challenges of performing diagnosis on medical imaging datasets with limited sample sizes, have been identified. Lastly, a set of future works have been proposed. Keywords: Deep learning, radiology, transfer learning, convolutional neural network.
ContributorsSarkar, Suryadipto (Author) / Wu, Teresa (Thesis advisor) / Papandreou-Suppappola, Antonia (Committee member) / Silva, Alvin (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2021
156306-Thumbnail Image.png
Description
Software-defined radio provides users with a low-cost and flexible platform for implementing and studying advanced communications and remote sensing applications. Two such applications include unmanned aerial system-to-ground communications channel and joint sensing and communication systems. In this work, these applications are studied.

In the first part, unmanned aerial system-to-ground communications

Software-defined radio provides users with a low-cost and flexible platform for implementing and studying advanced communications and remote sensing applications. Two such applications include unmanned aerial system-to-ground communications channel and joint sensing and communication systems. In this work, these applications are studied.

In the first part, unmanned aerial system-to-ground communications channel models are derived from empirical data collected from software-defined radio transceivers in residential and mountainous desert environments using a small (< 20 kg) unmanned aerial system during low-altitude flight (< 130 m). The Kullback-Leibler divergence measure was employed to characterize model mismatch from the empirical data. Using this measure the derived models accurately describe the underlying data.

In the second part, an experimental joint sensing and communications system is implemented using a network of software-defined radio transceivers. A novel co-design receiver architecture is presented and demonstrated within a three-node joint multiple access system topology consisting of an independent radar and communications transmitter along with a joint radar and communications receiver. The receiver tracks an emulated target moving along a predefined path and simultaneously decodes a communications message. Experimental system performance bounds are characterized jointly using the communications channel capacity and novel estimation information rate.
ContributorsGutierrez, Richard (Author) / Bliss, Daniel W (Thesis advisor) / Papandreou-Suppappola, Antonia (Committee member) / Ogras, Umit Y. (Committee member) / Tepedelenlioğlu, Cihan (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2018
171654-Thumbnail Image.png
Description
The advancement and marked increase in the use of computing devices in health care for large scale and personal medical use has transformed the field of medicine and health care into a data rich domain. This surge in the availability of data has allowed domain experts to investigate, study and

The advancement and marked increase in the use of computing devices in health care for large scale and personal medical use has transformed the field of medicine and health care into a data rich domain. This surge in the availability of data has allowed domain experts to investigate, study and discover inherent patterns in diseases from new perspectives and in turn, further the field of medicine. Storage and analysis of this data in real time aids in enhancing the response time and efficiency of doctors and health care specialists. However, due to the time critical nature of most life- threatening diseases, there is a growing need to make informed decisions prior to the occurrence of any fatal outcome. Alongside time sensitivity, analyzing data specific to diseases and their effects on an individual basis leads to more efficient prognosis and rapid deployment of cures. The primary challenge in addressing both of these issues arises from the time varying and time sensitive nature of the data being studied and in the ability to successfully predict anomalous events using only observed data.This dissertation introduces adaptive machine learning algorithms that aid in the prediction of anomalous situations arising due to abnormalities present in patients diagnosed with certain types of diseases. Emphasis is given to the adaptation and development of algorithms based on an individual basis to further the accuracy of all predictions made. The main objectives are to learn the underlying representation of the data using empirical methods and enhance it using domain knowledge. The learned model is then utilized as a guide for statistical machine learning methods to predict the occurrence of anomalous events in the near future. Further enhancement of the learned model is achieved by means of tuning the objective function of the algorithm to incorporate domain knowledge. Along with anomaly forecasting using multi-modal data, this dissertation also investigates the use of univariate time series data towards the prediction of onset of diseases using Bayesian nonparametrics.
ContributorsDas, Subhasish (Author) / Gupta, Sandeep K.S. (Thesis advisor) / Banerjee, Ayan (Committee member) / Indic, Premananda (Committee member) / Papandreou-Suppappola, Antonia (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022
171460-Thumbnail Image.png
Description
Arc Routing Problems (ARPs) are a type of routing problem that finds routes of minimum total cost covering the edges or arcs in a graph representing street or road networks. They find application in many essential services such as residential waste collection, winter gritting, and others. Being NP-hard, solutions are

Arc Routing Problems (ARPs) are a type of routing problem that finds routes of minimum total cost covering the edges or arcs in a graph representing street or road networks. They find application in many essential services such as residential waste collection, winter gritting, and others. Being NP-hard, solutions are usually found using heuristic methods. This dissertation contributes to heuristics for ARP, with a focus on the Capacitated Arc Routing Problem (CARP) with additional constraints. In operations such as residential waste collection, vehicle breakdown disruptions occur frequently. A new variant Capacitated Arc Re-routing Problem for Vehicle Break-down (CARP-VB) is introduced to address the need to re-route using only remaining vehicles to avoid missing services. A new heuristic Probe is developed to solve CARP-VB. Experiments on benchmark instances show that Probe is better in reducing the makespan and hence effective in reducing delays and avoiding missing services. In addition to total cost, operators are also interested in solutions that are attractive, that is, routes that are contiguous, compact, and non-overlapping to manage the work. Operators may not adopt a solution that is not attractive even if it is optimum. They are also interested in solutions that are balanced in workload to meet equity requirements. A new multi-objective memetic algorithm, MA-ABC is developed, that optimizes three objectives: Attractiveness, makespan, and total cost. On testing with benchmark instances, MA-ABC was found to be effective in providing attractive and balanced route solutions without affecting the total cost. Changes in the problem specification such as demand and topology occurs frequently in business operations. Machine learning be applied to learn the distribution behind these changes and generate solutions quickly at time of inference. Splice is a machine learning framework for CARP that generates closer to optimum solutions quickly using a graph neural network and deep Q-learning. Splice can solve several variants of node and arc routing problems using the same architecture without any modification. Splice was trained and tested using randomly generated instances. Splice generated solutions faster that are also better in comparison to popular metaheuristics.
ContributorsRamamoorthy, Muhilan (Author) / Syrotiuk, Violet R. (Thesis advisor) / Forrest, Stephanie (Committee member) / Mirchandani, Pitu (Committee member) / Sen, Arunabha (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022