Brain tumor classification is a very important and the most prominent step for assessing life-threatening abnormal tissues and providing an efficient treatment in patient recovery. To identify pathological conditions in the brain, there exist various medical imaging technologies. Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) is extensively used in medical imaging due to its excellent image quality and independence from ionizing radiations. The significance of deep learning, a subset of artificial intelligence in the area of medical diagnosis applications, has macadamized the path in rapid developments for brain tumor detection from MRI to higher prediction rate. For brain tumor analysis and classification, the convolution neural network (CNN) is the most extensive and widely used deep learning algorithm. In this work, we present a comparative performance analysis of transfer learning-based CNN-pretrained VGG-16, ResNet-50, and Inception-v3 models for automatic prediction of tumor cells in the brain. Pretrained models are demonstrated on the MRI brain tumor images dataset consisting of 233 images. Our paper aims to locate brain tumors with the utilization of the VGG-16 pretrained CNN model. The performance of our model will be evaluated on accuracy. As an outcome, we can estimate that the pretrained model VGG-16 determines highly adequate results with an increase in the accuracy rate of training and validation.
In traditional Internet of Things (IoT) ecosystems, fog devices transmit data from sensors to a centralized cloud server. Issues with security and upkeep while updating firmware for millions of smart devices, single points of failure, as well as third-party Cloud server administration, the difficulty of frequently updating the firmware on millions of smart devices presents security and maintenance issues as well as a bottleneck in information flows, all raise privacy concerns. Blockchain technology eliminates the need for trusted third parties while also preventing single points of failure and other issues. As a result, academics are looking into the usage of blockchain in the IoT space. The most recent state-of-the-art developments in blockchain for IoT, blockchain for Cloud, blockchain for eHealth, smart cities, transportation, and other programmes are examined in this article.
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