Biomedical reasoning skills are evidenced early in a curriculum involving PBL and further increase during training. This is accompanied by a decrease in factual knowledge retention. The self-estimation of core knowledge appears to be related to reasoning capacity, which suggests there is a link between the two processes.
Statistical analysis of Diffusion Tensor Imaging (DTI) data requires a computational framework that is both numerically tractable (to account for the high dimensional nature of the data) and geometric (to account for the nonlinear nature of diffusion tensors). Building upon earlier studies exploiting a Riemannian framework to address these challenges, the present paper proposes a novel metric and an accompanying computational framework for DTI data processing. The proposed approach grounds the signal processing operations in interpolating curves. Well-chosen interpolating curves are shown to provide a computational framework that is at the same time tractable and information relevant for DTI processing. In addition, and in contrast to earlier methods, it provides an interpolation method which preserves anisotropy, a central information carried by diffusion tensor data.
The generalization of the geometric mean of positive scalars to positive
definite matrices has attracted considerable attention since the seminal work
of Ando. The paper generalizes this framework of matrix means by proposing the
definition of a rank-preserving mean for two or an arbitrary number of positive
semi-definite matrices of fixed rank. The proposed mean is shown to be
geometric in that it satisfies all the expected properties of a rank-preserving
geometric mean. The work is motivated by operations on low-rank approximations
of positive definite matrices in high-dimensional spaces.Comment: To appear in Linear Algebra and its Application
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