Coupling Informatics Algorithm Development and Visual Analysis Danny Dunlavy, Pat Crossno, Tim Shead Sandia National Laboratories SIAM Annual Meeting July 7, 2008 SAND2008-4470P Sandia is a multiprogram laboratory operated by Sandia Corporation, a Lockheed Martin Company, for the United States Department of Energy’s National Nuclear Security Administration under contract DE-AC04-94AL85000.
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Coupling Informatics Algorithm Development and Visual Analysis Danny Dunlavy, Pat Crossno, Tim Shead Sandia National Laboratories SIAM Annual Meeting July.
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Coupling Informatics Algorithm Development
and Visual Analysis
Danny Dunlavy, Pat Crossno, Tim SheadSandia National Laboratories
SIAM Annual MeetingJuly 7, 2008
SAND2008-4470P
Sandia is a multiprogram laboratory operated by Sandia Corporation, a Lockheed Martin Company,for the United States Department of Energy’s National Nuclear Security Administration
under contract DE-AC04-94AL85000.
<DOC><DOCNO><s docid="APW19990519.0113" num="1" stype="-1">APW19990519.0113</s></DOCNO><DATE_TIME><P><s docid="APW19990519.0113" num="2" stype="-1"> 1999-05-19 21:11:17</s> </P></DATE_TIME><BODY><CATEGORY><s docid="APW19990519.0113" num="3"stype="-1"> usa</s></CATEGORY><HEADLINE><P><s docid="APW19990519.0113" num="4" stype="0"> Pulses May Ease SchizophrenicVoices</s> </P></HEADLINE><TEXT><P><s docid="APW19990519.0113" num="5" stype="1"> WASHINGTON (AP)Schizophrenia patients whose medication couldn't stop the imaginary voices in theirheads gained some relief after researchers repeatedly sent a magnetic field into asmall area of their brains.</s> </P><P><s docid="APW19990519.0113" num="6"stype="1"> About half of 12 patients studied said their hallucinations becamemuch less severe after the treatment, which feels like ``having a woodpeckerknock on your head'' once a second for up to 16 minutes, said researcherDr.Ralph Hoffman.</s> <s docid="APW19990519.0113" num="7" stype="1">The voices stopped completely in three of these patients.</s> </P><P><sdocid="APW19990519.0113" num="8" stype="1"> The effect lasted for up toa few days for most participants, and one man reported that it lasted seven weeksafterbeing treated daily for four days.</s> </P><P><sdocid="APW19990519.0113" num="9" stype="1"> Hoffman stressed that thestudy is only preliminary and can't prove that the treatment would be useful.</s> <sdocid="APW19990519.0113" num="10" stype="1"> ``We need to do much moreresearch on this,'' he said in an interview.</s> </P><P><sdocid="APW19990519.0113" num="11" stype="1"> Hoffman, deputy medicaldirector of the Yale Psychiatric Institute, is scheduled to present the workThursday at the annual meeting of the American Psychiatric Association.</s> </P><P><s docid="APW19990519.0113" num="12" stype="1"> Not all people withschizophrenia hear voices, and of those who do, Hoffman estimated that maybe 25percent can't control them with medications even when other disease symptomsabate.</s> <s docid="APW19990519.0113" num="13" stype="1"> So the workcould pay off for ``a small but very ill group of patients,'' he said.</s> </P><P><sdocid="APW19990519.0113" num="14" stype="1"> The treatment is calledtranscranial magnetic stimulation, or TMS.</s> <s docid="APW19990519.0113"num="15" stype="1"> While past research indicates it mightbe helpful in lifting depression, it hasn't been studied much in schizophrenia.</s> </P><P><s docid="APW19990519.0113" num="16" stype="1"> In TMS, anelectromagnetic coil is placed on the scalp and current is turned on and off to create apulsing magnetic field that reaches into a small area of the brain.</s> <sdocid="APW19990519.0113" num="17" stype="1"> The goal is to make brain cellsunderneath the coil fire messages to adjoining cells.</s> </P><P><sdocid="APW19990519.0113" num="18" stype="1"> The procedure is muchdifferent from electroconvulsive therapy, called ECT, which applies pulses ofelectricity rather than a magnetic field to the brain.</s> <sdocid="APW19990519.0113"num="19" stype="1"> Unlike TMS, ECT creates a briefseizure and is performed under general anesthesia.</s> <sdocid="APW19990519.0113" num="20" stype="1"> ECT is used most often fortreatingsevere depression.</s> </P><P><s docid="APW19990519.0113" num="21"stype="1"> In TMS, the magnetic pulses are thought to calm the affected partof the brain if they're given as slowly as once per second, Hoffman said.</s> <s docid="APW19990519.0113" num="22" stype="1"> He and colleagues targeted an area involved in understanding speech, above and behind the left ear, on the theory that hallucinated voices come from overactivity there.</s> </P><P><s docid="APW19990519.0113" num="23" stype="1"> The treatment can make scalp muscles muscle contract, leading tothe woodpecker feeling, he said, but patients could tolerate it.</s> <s docid="APW19990519.0113" num="24" stype="1">Headachewas the most common side effect, and there was no sign that the treatment affected the ability to understandspeech, he said.</s> </P><P><s docid="APW19990519.0113" num="25" stype="1"> To make sure the study resultsdidn'treflect just the psychological boost of getting a treatment, researchers gave sham and real treatments to each studyparticipant and studied the difference in how patients responded.</s> <s docid="APW19990519.0113" num="26" starting with
Latent Semantic Analysiste
rms
documentsd1 d2 dn
t2
t1
tm
…d3 d4
.
.
. Truncated SVD
Concept space
Information retrieval
Clustering
Doc & term relationships
Text corpus
low rank
approximation
term
s
concepts documents
con
cep
ts
singular values
Concept Space∆policy∆planning∆politics∆tomlinson∆1986oSport in Society: policy, Politics and Culture, ed A. Tomlinson (1990) oPolicy and Politics in Sport, PE and Leisure eds S. Fleming, M. Talbot and A. Tomlinson (1995) oPolicy and Planning (II), ed J. Wilkinson (1986) oPolicy and Planning (I), ed J. Wilkinson (1986) oLeisure: Politics, Planning and People, ed A. Tomlinson (1985)
∆parker∆lifestyles∆1989∆partoWork, Leisure and Lifestyles (Part 2), ed S. R. Parker (1989) oWork, Leisure and Lifestyles (Part 1), ed S. R. Parker (1989)
[Leisure Studies of America Data]
• Document parsing, matrix creation and weighting• SVD:• Truncated SVD:• Query scores (query as new “doc”):• LSA Ranking:• Document similarities:• Term Similarities:• Similarity statistics
– Mean, standard deviation
ParaText™ Operations
(thresholded → sparse)
term
concepts documents
co
nc
ep
ts
singular values
T
DT
Document similarity matrix
Document similarity graph• Each document (or term, entity, etc.) is a vertex• Each row defines an edge
Document Similarity Graphsd
ocu
men
ts
concepts documents
con
cep
ts
singular values
threshold
sparse coordinate format
Statistics on edges– One graph: one-sample t statistic