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Results for "Disease Detection"

Dates Fruit Disease Recognition using Machine Learning

arXiv ·

This paper proposes a machine learning method for early detection and classification of date fruit diseases, which are economically important to countries like Saudi Arabia. The method uses a hybrid feature extraction approach combining L*a*b color features, statistical features, and Discrete Wavelet Transform (DWT) texture features. Experiments using a dataset of 871 images achieved the highest average accuracy using Random Forest (RF), Multilayer Perceptron (MLP), Naïve Bayes (NB), and Fuzzy Decision Trees (FDT) classifiers.

AI-aided cancer diagnostics in the era of precision medicine

MBZUAI ·

MBZUAI researchers are refining AI techniques to improve cancer diagnosis for colorectal and breast cancer, both common in the Middle East. They are using "few-shot tissue image generation," in which AI generates data for training AI models to recognize lesions, addressing the challenge of limited training data. The developed framework improves the efficiency of radiologists in breast cancer diagnosis, leading to better detection of breast lesions and timely treatment interventions. Why it matters: These advancements in AI-aided diagnostics can lead to earlier and more accurate cancer detection, ultimately improving patient outcomes in the region and beyond.

Early and Accurate Detection of Tomato Leaf Diseases Using TomFormer

arXiv ·

Researchers introduce TomFormer, a transformer-based model for accurate and early detection of tomato leaf diseases, with the goal of deployment on the Hello Stretch robot for real-time diagnosis. TomFormer combines a visual transformer and CNN, achieving state-of-the-art results on KUTomaDATA, PlantDoc, and PlantVillage datasets. KUTomaDATA was collected from a greenhouse in Abu Dhabi, UAE.

The AI will see you now

MBZUAI ·

MBZUAI is developing AI algorithms to intelligently process data from wearables and home sensors for remote patient monitoring. The algorithms aim to analyze multiple strands of health data to provide a more comprehensive view of a patient's health, distinguishing between genuine emergencies and benign situations. MBZUAI's provost, Professor Fakhri Karray, believes this approach could handle 20-25% of diagnoses virtually, reducing the burden on healthcare systems. Why it matters: This research could significantly improve healthcare efficiency and accessibility in the UAE and beyond by enabling more effective remote patient monitoring and reducing unnecessary hospital visits.

AI that's built to save lives

KAUST ·

A KAUST team led by Xin Gao developed an AI model for COVID-19 detection from CT scans, addressing limitations of existing methods. The model incorporates a novel embedding strategy, a CT scan simulator, and a 2.5D deep-learning algorithm. Tested at King Faisal Specialist Hospital, the model demonstrated high accuracy in detecting COVID-19 cases. Why it matters: This research provides a valuable tool for rapid and accurate COVID-19 diagnosis in the region, especially in early-stage infections, improving healthcare outcomes.