This study intends to explore the wavelet denoising for optimal MUAP detection through the wavelet analysis of surface electromyographic (SEMG) signals. We first derive an estimator for signal to noise ratio and show that this estimator correlates to the quality of the reconstructed simulated signal. When applying this estimator to evaluate the SEMG signal, we find that the reconstructed signal is insensitive to the selection of denoising methods. This finding is further confirmed by the identical plots of those reconstructed SEMG data. In addition, the close correspondence of MUAP occurrences in the reconstructed signal and those in the original signal suggests that the denoising procedure can preserve the features of MUAP in the original SEMG signals.
The networks yielded from FDG PET and TRODAT-1 revealed good correlation with clinical data and that nigrostriatal pathway abnormalities are preceded by typical occipital hypometabolism in mild stage of DLB. Dopamine transporter levels may serve as early diagnostic tool and FDG PET as staging indicator for DLB pathology.
This paper presents a computer-aided platform, named Virtual Hospital (VH), to evaluate the wayfinding ability that is found impaired in senile people with early dementia. The development of the VH takes the advantage of virtual reality technology to make the evaluation of the sense of direction more convenient and accurate then the conventional way. A pilot study was carried out to test its feasibility in differentiating the sense of direction between different genders. The results with significant differences in the response time (p<<0.05) and the pointing error (p<<0.01) between genders suggest the potential of the VH for clinical uses. Further improvement on the human-machine interface is necessary to make it easy for geriatric people to use.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.