எங்கள் குழு ஒவ்வொரு ஆண்டும் அமெரிக்கா, ஐரோப்பா மற்றும் ஆசியா முழுவதும் 1000 அறிவியல் சங்கங்களின் ஆதரவுடன் 3000+ உலகளாவிய மாநாட்டுத் தொடர் நிகழ்வுகளை ஏற்பாடு செய்து 700+ திறந்த அணுகல் இதழ்களை வெளியிடுகிறது, இதில் 50000 க்கும் மேற்பட்ட தலைசிறந்த ஆளுமைகள், புகழ்பெற்ற விஞ்ஞானிகள் ஆசிரியர் குழு உறுப்பினர்களாக உள்ளனர்.
அதிக வாசகர்கள் மற்றும் மேற்கோள்களைப் பெறும் திறந்த அணுகல் இதழ்கள்
700 இதழ்கள் மற்றும் 15,000,000 வாசகர்கள் ஒவ்வொரு பத்திரிகையும் 25,000+ வாசகர்களைப் பெறுகிறது
Oumaima Terrada
The diagnosis of atherosclerosis is a difficult cognitive procedure. In medical diagnosis support systems, artificial intelligence techniques like machine learning algorithms have demonstrated their effectiveness (MDSS). In this study, we created a brand-new machine learning MDSS to improve cardiovascular disease diagnosis. 835 patient medical records with atherosclerosis, which is typically brought on by coronary artery disorders (CAD), were used in our study. These records were gathered from three databases. Several input variables based on three databases, including the Cleveland heart, are included in the system input layer. databases on illness, Hungarian, and Z-Alizadeh Sani. Artificial Neural Network (ANN), K-Nearest Neighbor (KNN), Support Vector Machine (SVM), Decision Tree (DT), Nave Bayes (NB), Classification Ensemble (CE), and Discriminant Analysis (DA) algorithms are used to evaluate the system. Through a number of performance indicators, the robustness of the suggested methodologies was assessed. The findings demonstrated that the suggested MDSS achieved an accuracy of (98%), which is greater accuracy than the current techniques. These findings mark a positive development in the field of widespread clinical atherosclerosis disease diagnosis. This section includes a review of the literature on a few chosen works on automated heart disease detection that made use of the same existing datasets and that we will later take into consideration for the performance comparison.
In the authors used a neural network ensemble approach to combine the projected values from earlier models to construct new models. 89.01% more accuracy was attained than with the machine learning approach. The authors suggested a clinical decision support system (CDSS) employing weighted fuzzy rules (WFR) for cardiac disease prediction in another paper that was published. Two evaluation scenarios were employed; the first automates the method for producing WFRs, and the second creates a fuzzy rule-based CDSS. Using the Cleveland Heart Disease database, they evaluated their CDSS. The best accuracy score this method achieves in comparison to a neural networkbased system is 62.35%.