Nuevos mecanismos para conocer el riesgo de lesión en el deporte en diferentes tramos de la temporada deportiva. R&P (Recovery and Performance)

Otro Materias > Ingeniería Universidad Europea del Atlántico > Investigación > Herramientas TIC
Fundación Universitaria Internacional de Colombia > Investigación > Herramientas TIC
Universidad Internacional Iberoamericana México > Investigación > Herramientas TIC
Universidad Internacional Iberoamericana Puerto Rico > Investigación > Herramientas TIC
Universidad Internacional do Cuanza > Investigación > Herramientas TIC
Universidad de La Romana > Investigación > Herramientas TIC
Cerrado Español Como resultado del proyecto “Nuevos mecanismos para conocer el riesgo de lesión en el deporte en diferentes tramos de la temporada deportiva” se ha generado una herramienta digital que permite llevar el control de las lesiones de cada deportista, así como sus constantes biomecánicas, hábitos de alimentación y estado de salud emocional de tal forma que, se cuenta con información que combina varios factores a un nivel de detalle importante y de modo personalizado para cada jugador. De este modo, se obtienen los inputs para generar el análisis estadístico que alerta sobre las probabilidades de sufrir determinada lesión. Objetivo del Proyecto: Desarrollar una herramienta que permita identificar el riesgo de lesión de un deportista, independientemente del nivel o categoría del mismo, y poder actuar en consecuencia de manera individualizada, según el período de la temporada en el que se encuentre. Financiación: Este proyecto ha sido cofinanciado por la Sociedad de Desarrollo Regional de Cantabria (SODERCAN) y el el Programa Operativo FEDER de Cantabria en el marco del programa denominado I+C= +C 2016 (Investigación + Conocimiento= +Cantabria) que tiene por objetivo el fortalecimiento del tejido industrial de la región. Inicio: 15/12/2016 Fin: 14/12/2018 Código Externo: ID16-IN-022 metadata SIN ESPECIFICAR mail SIN ESPECIFICAR (2016) Nuevos mecanismos para conocer el riesgo de lesión en el deporte en diferentes tramos de la temporada deportiva. R&P (Recovery and Performance). Repositorio de la Universidad. (Inédito)

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Resumen

Como resultado del proyecto “Nuevos mecanismos para conocer el riesgo de lesión en el deporte en diferentes tramos de la temporada deportiva” se ha generado una herramienta digital que permite llevar el control de las lesiones de cada deportista, así como sus constantes biomecánicas, hábitos de alimentación y estado de salud emocional de tal forma que, se cuenta con información que combina varios factores a un nivel de detalle importante y de modo personalizado para cada jugador. De este modo, se obtienen los inputs para generar el análisis estadístico que alerta sobre las probabilidades de sufrir determinada lesión. Objetivo del Proyecto: Desarrollar una herramienta que permita identificar el riesgo de lesión de un deportista, independientemente del nivel o categoría del mismo, y poder actuar en consecuencia de manera individualizada, según el período de la temporada en el que se encuentre. Financiación: Este proyecto ha sido cofinanciado por la Sociedad de Desarrollo Regional de Cantabria (SODERCAN) y el el Programa Operativo FEDER de Cantabria en el marco del programa denominado I+C= +C 2016 (Investigación + Conocimiento= +Cantabria) que tiene por objetivo el fortalecimiento del tejido industrial de la región. Inicio: 15/12/2016 Fin: 14/12/2018 Código Externo: ID16-IN-022

Tipo de Documento: Otro
Palabras Clave: Lesiones, práctica deportiva, actividad física, herramienta prevención, Salud
Clasificación temática: Materias > Ingeniería
Divisiones: Universidad Europea del Atlántico > Investigación > Herramientas TIC
Fundación Universitaria Internacional de Colombia > Investigación > Herramientas TIC
Universidad Internacional Iberoamericana México > Investigación > Herramientas TIC
Universidad Internacional Iberoamericana Puerto Rico > Investigación > Herramientas TIC
Universidad Internacional do Cuanza > Investigación > Herramientas TIC
Universidad de La Romana > Investigación > Herramientas TIC
Depositado: 25 Feb 2025 23:30
Ultima Modificación: 25 Feb 2025 23:30
URI: https://repositorio.unincol.edu.co/id/eprint/245

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A novel approach for disease and pests detection in potato production system based on deep learning

Vulnerability of potato crops to diseases and pest infestation can affect its quality and lead to significant yield losses. Timely detection of such diseases can help take effective decisions. For this purpose, a deep learning-based object detection framework is designed in this study to identify and classify major potato diseases and pests under real-world field conditions. A total of 2,688 field images were collected from two research farms in Punjab, Pakistan, across multiple growth stages in various seasonal conditions. Excluding 285 symptoms-free images from the earliest collection led to 2,403 images which were annotated into four biotic-stress classes: blight disease (n = 630), leaf spot disease (n = 370), leafroll virus (viral symptom complex; n = 888), and Colorado potato beetle (larvae/adults; n = 515), indicating class imbalance. Several state-of-the-art models were used including YOLOv8 variants (n/s/m), YOLOv7, YOLOv5, and Faster R-CNN, and the results are discussed in relation to recent potato disease classification studies involving cropped leaf images. Stratified splitting (70% training, 20% validation, 10% testing) was applied to preserve class distribution across all subsets. YOLOv8-medium achieve the best performance with mean average precision (mAP)@0.5 of 98% on the held-out test images. Results for stable 5-fold cross-validation show a mean mAP@0.5 of 97.8%, which offers a balance between accuracy and inference time. Model robustness was evaluated using 5-fold cross-validation and repeated training with different random seeds, showing a low variance of ±0.4% mAP. Results demonstrate promising outcomes under the real-world field conditions, while, broader cross-region and cross-season validation is intended for the future.

Producción Científica

Ahmed Abbas mail , Saif Ur Rehman mail , Khalid Mahmood mail , Santos Gracia Villar mail santos.gracia@uneatlantico.es, Luis Alonso Dzul López mail luis.dzul@uneatlantico.es, Aseel Smerat mail , Imran Ashraf mail ,

Abbas

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Fish consumption and brain structure: a comprehensive systematic review of observational studies

Background Age-related structural changes in the human brain, including cortical atrophy, reductions in grey and white matter volumes, and the accumulation of small vessel–related lesions such as white matter hyperintensities (WMH) and cerebral microbleeds, represent critical biological substrates underlying cognitive decline and dementia. Fish consumption has been associated with slower cognitive decline and reduced risk of dementia, but a comprehensive evaluation of its relation with brain structures is lacking. Aims The aim of this study was to systematically review current scientific literature providing evidence of relation between fish intake and brain structures in human studies. Methods Studies indexed in two major electronic databases have been screened based on a combination of keywords and MeSH terms. Studies were eligible whether they assessed fish consumption in relation to brain structures in the adult populations. Results A total of 24 studies conducted predominantly on older adults met inclusion criteria. Most brain volume measures were obtained via magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) procedures. Higher fish consumption was associated with reduced severity of white matter hyperintensities (a biomarker of cerebral small vessel disease and white matter damage) and cerebral micro-bleed, preservation of certain brain areas volumes (i.e., hippocampus, temporal lobe and periventricle white matter) and cortical thickness of specific areas (i.e., precuneus, parietal, and cingulate grey matter), among others, compared to lower intake. Some analyses found no association and isolated findings suggested possible adverse associations that were not consistently replicated. Studies reporting null findings may underline the possible relevance of the overall diet (i.e., adherence to the Mediterranean diet). Conclusions Inclusion of fish in a healthy and balanced diet is associated with better white matter grades on MRI and slower progression of white matter hyperintensities and reduction of vascular-related lesions of the aging brain, suggesting a potential role in preventing neurocognitive deterioration. Heterogeneity across studies underscores the need for additional studies.

Artículos y libros

Justyna Godos mail , Giuseppe Caruso mail , Agnieszka Micek mail , Alberto Dolci mail , Zoltan Ungvari mail , Andrea Lehoczki mail , Lisandra León Brizuela mail , Evelyn Frias-Toral mail , Andrea Di Mauro mail , Mario Siervo mail , Michelino Di Rosa mail , Giuseppe Grosso mail ,

Godos

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Benchmarking multiple instance learning architectures from patches to pathology for prostate cancer detection and grading using attention-based weak supervision

Histopathological evaluation is necessary for the diagnosis and grading of prostate cancer, which is still one of the most common cancers in men globally. Traditional evaluation is time-consuming, prone to inter-observer variability, and challenging to scale. The clinical usefulness of current AI systems is limited by the need for comprehensive pixel-level annotations. The objective of this research is to develop and evaluate a large-scale benchmarking study on a weakly supervised deep learning framework that minimizes the need for annotation and ensures interpretability for automated prostate cancer diagnosis and International Society of Urological Pathology (ISUP) grading using whole slide images (WSIs). This study rigorously tested six cutting-edge multiple instance learning (MIL) architectures (CLAM-MB, CLAM-SB, ILRA-MIL, AC-MIL, AMD-MIL, WiKG-MIL), three feature encoders (ResNet50, CTransPath, UNI2), and four patch extraction techniques (varying sizes and overlap) using the PANDA dataset (10,616 WSIs), yielding 72 experimental configurations. The methodology used distributed cloud computing to process over 31 million tissue patches, implementing advanced attention mechanisms to ensure clinical interpretability through Grad-CAM visualizations. The optimum configuration (UNI2 encoder with ILRA-MIL, 256 256 patches, 50% overlap) achieved 78.75% accuracy and 90.12% quadratic weighted kappa (QWK), outperforming traditional methods and approaching expert pathologist-level diagnostic capability. Overlapping smaller patches offered the best balance of spatial resolution and contextual information, while domain-specific foundation models performed noticeably better than generic encoders. This work is the first large-scale, comprehensive comparison of weekly supervised MIL methods for prostate cancer diagnosis and grading. The proposed approach has excellent clinical diagnostic performance, scalability, practical feasibility through cloud computing, and interpretability using visualization tools.

Producción Científica

Naveed Anwer Butt mail , Dilawaiz Sarwat mail , Irene Delgado Noya mail irene.delgado@uneatlantico.es, Kilian Tutusaus mail kilian.tutusaus@uneatlantico.es, Nagwan Abdel Samee mail , Imran Ashraf mail ,

Butt

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Attention-based multi-feature fusion neuromarker for EEG-driven stress classification in learners

With the growing academic pressure and competitive educational environment, students often face mental stress, which can affect their academic performance and mental health. Its accurate and timely detection and prevention is important. Traditionally, mental stress has been reported by self-assessment, which is highly subjective and can be erroneous. With advances in neuroscience, electroencephalogram (EEG) signals have been used to study brain states more objectively. EEG-based features, including time-domain, frequency-domain, and various types of connectivity features, have been used to effectively classify stress signals. However, these individual features are only able to present one aspect of the brain under stress. Several studies have combined a distinct set of features extracted from EEG signals, including time and frequency domain features, with other peripheral signals. Stress is a complex mechanism which leads to alternation in brain dynamics, its connectivity patterns and information flow. This study proposed a feature-fusion model that can effectively combine spatial features, i.e. Microstates (MS), connectivity features like Transfer Entropy (TE) and Granger Causality (GC), which provided a new neuromarker for stress classification. These features are combined with attention fusion, which enhances the discriminant features and mitigates the individual limitations within each modality. We also extracted microstates for stress-based signals. It provided a new set of microstate topomaps to study brain networks when under stress, which was not explored previously. The proposed Attention-fusion based multi-feature set is classified using Support Vector Machine, Linear Discriminant Analysis (LDA) and Multilayer Perceptron (MLP) and gave a reliable accuracy of 95.47%, 98.91%, and 83.49%, respectively. To validate the proposed method, the classification results were compared with individual and binary fusion of MS, TE and GC features, which further confirmed the robustness of the framework. This proposed feature fusion provides a more robust stress classification neuromarker, which can effectively cover the brain dynamics for accurate reporting of the underlying mental state.

Producción Científica

Saliha Ejaz mail , Soyiba Javed mail , Imran Shafi mail , Jamil Ahmad mail , Samuel Allende Monje mail samuel.allende@uneatlantico.es, Josep Alemany Iturriaga mail josep.alemany@uneatlantico.es, Jin-Ghoo Choi mail , Imran Ashraf mail ,

Ejaz

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Human Activity Recognition in Domestic Settings Based on Optical Techniques and Ensemble Models

Human activity recognition (HAR) is essential in many applications, such as smart homes, assisted living, healthcare monitoring, rehabilitation, physiotherapy, and geriatric care. Conventional methods of HAR use wearable sensors, e.g., acceleration sensors and gyroscopes. However, they are limited by issues such as sensitivity to position, user inconvenience, and potential health risks with long-term use. Optical camera systems that are vision-based provide an alternative that is not intrusive; however, they are susceptible to variations in lighting, intrusions, and privacy issues. The paper uses an optical method of recognizing human domestic activities based on pose estimation and deep learning ensemble models. The skeletal keypoint features proposed in the current methodology are extracted from video data using PoseNet to generate a privacy-preserving representation that captures key motion dynamics without being sensitive to changes in appearance. A total of 30 subjects (15 male and 15 female) were sampled across 2734 activity samples, including nine daily domestic activities. There were six deep learning architectures, namely, the Transformer (Transformer), Long Short-Term Memory (LSTM), Gated Recurrent Unit (GRU), Multilayer Perceptron (MLP), One-Dimensional Convolutional Neural Network (1D CNN), and a hybrid Convolutional Neural Network–Long Short-Term Memory (CNN–LSTM) architecture. The results on the hold-out test set show that the CNN–LSTM architecture achieves an accuracy of 98.78% within our experimental setting. Leave-One-Subject-Out cross-validation further confirms robust generalization across unseen individuals, with CNN–LSTM achieving a mean accuracy of 97.21% ± 1.84% across 30 subjects. The results demonstrate that vision-based pose estimation with deep learning is a useful, precise, and non-intrusive approach to HAR in smart healthcare and home automation systems.

Producción Científica

Muhammad Amjad Raza mail , Nasir Mehmood mail , Hafeez Ur Rehman Siddiqui mail , Adil Ali Saleem mail , Roberto Marcelo Álvarez mail roberto.alvarez@uneatlantico.es, Yini Airet Miró Vera mail yini.miro@uneatlantico.es, Isabel de la Torre Díez mail ,

Raza