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Publications

Publications by Inês Dutra

2015

A Multi-Relational Model for Depression Relapse in Patients with Bipolar Disorder

Authors
Salvini, R; Dias, RD; Lafer, B; Dutra, I;

Publication
MEDINFO 2015: EHEALTH-ENABLED HEALTH

Abstract
Bipolar Disorder (BD) is a chronic and disabling disease that usually appears around 20 to 30 years old. Patients who suffer with BD may struggle for years to achieve a correct diagnosis, and only 50% of them generally receive adequate treatment. In this work we apply a machine learning technique called Inductive Logic Programming (ILP) in order to model relapse and no-relapse patients in a first attempt in this area to improve diagnosis and optimize psychiatrists' time spent with patients. We use ILP because it is well suited for our multi-relational dataset and because a human can easily interpret the logical rules produced. Our classifiers can predict relapse cases with 92% Recall and no-relapse cases with 73% Recall. The rules and variable theories generated by ILP reproduce some findings from the scientific literature. The generated multi-relational models can be directly interpreted by clinicians and researchers, and also open space to research biological mechanisms and interventions. © 2015 IMIA and IOS Press.

2015

A multi-relational model for depression relapse in patients with bipolar disorder by means of a machine learning approach

Authors
Dias, R; Salvini, R; Dutra, I; Lafer, B;

Publication
BIPOLAR DISORDERS

Abstract

2015

Automated Diagnosis of Breast Cancer on Medical Images

Authors
Velikova, M; Dutra, I; Burnside, ES;

Publication
Foundations of Biomedical Knowledge Representation - Methods and Applications

Abstract
The development and use of computerized decision-support systems in the domain of breast cancer has the potential to facilitate the early detection of disease as well as spare healthy women unnecessary interventions. Despite encouraging trends, there is much room for improvement in the capabilities of such systems to further alleviate the burden of breast cancer. One of the main challenges that current systems face is integrating and translating multi-scale variables like patient risk factors and imaging features into complex management recommendations that would supplement and/or generalize similar activities provided by subspecialty-trained clinicians currently. In this chapter, we discuss the main types of knowledge-objectattribute, spatial, temporal and hierarchical-present in the domain of breast image analysis and their formal representation using two popular techniques from artificial intelligence-Bayesian networks and first-order logic. In particular, we demonstrate (i) the explicit representation of uncertain relationships between low-level image features and high-level image findings (e.g., mass, microcalcifications) by probability distributions in Bayesian networks, and (ii) the expressive power of logic to generally represent the dynamic number of objects in the domain. By concrete examples with patient data we show the practical application of both formalisms and their potential for use in decision-support systems.

2014

Preface

Authors
Silva, F; Dutra, I; Costa, VS;

Publication
Lecture Notes in Computer Science (including subseries Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence and Lecture Notes in Bioinformatics)

Abstract

2017

Evolvix BEST Names for semantic reproducibility across code2brain interfaces

Authors
Loewe, L; Scheuer, KS; Keel, SA; Vyas, V; Liblit, B; Hanlon, B; Ferris, MC; Yin, J; Dutra, I; Pietsch, A; Javid, CG; Moog, CL; Meyer, J; Dresel, J; McLoone, B; Loberger, S; Movaghar, A; Gilchrist Scott, M; Sabri, Y; Sescleifer, D; Pereda Zorrilla, I; Zietlow, A; Smith, R; Pietenpol, S; Goldfinger, J; Atzen, SL; Freiberg, E; Waters, NP; Nusbaum, C; Nolan, E; Hotz, A; Kliman, RM; Mentewab, A; Fregien, N; Loewe, M;

Publication
ANNALS OF THE NEW YORK ACADEMY OF SCIENCES

Abstract
Names in programming are vital for understanding the meaning of code and big data. We define code2brain (C2B) interfaces as maps in compilers and brains between meaning and naming syntax, which help to understand executable code. While working toward an Evolvix syntax for general-purpose programming that makes accurate modeling easy for biologists, we observed how names affect C2B quality. To protect learning and coding investments, C2B interfaces require long-term backward compatibility and semantic reproducibility (accurate reproduction of computational meaning fromcoder-brains to reader-brains by code alone). Semantic reproducibility is often assumed until confusing synonyms degrade modeling in biology to deciphering exercises. We highlight empirical naming priorities from diverse individuals and roles of names in different modes of computing to show how naming easily becomes impossibly difficult. We present the Evolvix BEST (Brief, Explicit, Summarizing, Technical) Names concept for reducing naming priority conflicts, test it on a real challenge by naming subfolders for the Project Organization Stabilizing Tool system, and provide naming questionnaires designed to facilitate C2B debugging by improving names used as keywords in a stabilizing programming language. Our experiences inspired us to develop Evolvix using a flipped programming language design approach with some unexpected features and BEST Names at its core.

2017

On Applying Probabilistic Logic Programming to Breast Cancer Data

Authors
Real, JC; Dutra, I; Rocha, R;

Publication
Inductive Logic Programming - 27th International Conference, ILP 2017, Orléans, France, September 4-6, 2017, Revised Selected Papers

Abstract
Medical data is particularly interesting as a subject for relational data mining due to the complex interactions which exist between different entities. Furthermore, the ambiguity of medical imaging causes interpretation to be complex and error-prone, and thus particularly amenable to improvement through automated decision support. Probabilistic Inductive Logic Programming (PILP) is a particularly well-suited tool for this task, since it makes it possible to combine the relational nature of this field with the ambiguity inherent in human interpretation of medical imaging. This work presents a PILP setting for breast cancer data, where several clinical and demographic variables were collected retrospectively, and new probabilistic variables and rules reflecting domain knowledge were introduced. A PILP predictive model was built automatically from this data and experiments show that it can not only match the predictions of a team of experts in the area, but also consistently reduce the error rate of malignancy prediction, when compared to other non-relational techniques. © Springer International Publishing AG, part of Springer Nature 2018.

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