Channel coding considerations for wireless LANs
Daniel J. Costello Jr., Pierre R. Chevillat, et al.
ISIT 1997
The development of therapeutics and vaccines for human diseases requires a systematic understanding of human biology. Although animal and in vitro culture models can elucidate some disease mechanisms, they typically fail to adequately recapitulate human biology as evidenced by the predominant likelihood of clinical trial failure. To address this problem, we developed AutoTransOP, a neural network autoencoder framework, to map omics profiles from designated species or cellular contexts into a global latent space, from which germane information for different contexts can be identified without the typically imposed requirement of matched orthologues. This approach was found in general to perform at least as well as current alternative methods in identifying animal/culture-specific molecular features predictive of other contexts—most importantly without requiring homology matching. For an especially challenging test case, we successfully applied our framework to a set of inter-species vaccine serology studies, where 1-to-1 mapping between human and non-human primate features does not exist.
Daniel J. Costello Jr., Pierre R. Chevillat, et al.
ISIT 1997
Satoshi Hada
IEICE Transactions on Fundamentals of Electronics, Communications and Computer Sciences
Hang-Yip Liu, Steffen Schulze, et al.
Proceedings of SPIE - The International Society for Optical Engineering
R.A. Brualdi, A.J. Hoffman
Linear Algebra and Its Applications