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Keywords = PRAISE-U

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14 pages, 9996 KiB  
Article
Road Extraction from Remote Sensing Images Using a Skip-Connected Parallel CNN-Transformer Encoder-Decoder Model
by Linger Gui, Xingjian Gu, Fen Huang, Shougang Ren, Huanhuan Qin and Chengcheng Fan
Appl. Sci. 2025, 15(3), 1427; https://doi.org/10.3390/app15031427 - 30 Jan 2025
Viewed by 1185
Abstract
Extracting roads from remote sensing images holds significant practical value across fields like urban planning, traffic management, and disaster monitoring. Current Convolutional Neural Network (CNN) methods, praised for their robust local feature learning enabled by inductive biases, deliver impressive results. However, they face [...] Read more.
Extracting roads from remote sensing images holds significant practical value across fields like urban planning, traffic management, and disaster monitoring. Current Convolutional Neural Network (CNN) methods, praised for their robust local feature learning enabled by inductive biases, deliver impressive results. However, they face challenges in capturing global context and accurately extracting the linear features of roads due to their localized receptive fields. To address these shortcomings of traditional methods, this paper proposes a novel parallel encoder architecture that integrates a CNN Encoder Module (CEM) with a Transformer Encoder Module (TEM). The integration combines the CEM’s strength in local feature extraction with the TEM’s ability to incorporate global context, achieving complementary advantages and overcoming limitations of both Transformers and CNNs. Furthermore, the architecture also includes a Linear Convolution Module (LCM), which uses linear convolutions tailored to the shape and distribution of roads. By capturing image features in four specific directions, the LCM significantly improves the model’s ability to detect and represent global and linear road features. Experimental results demonstrate that our proposed method achieves substantial improvements on the German-Street Dataset and the Massachusetts Roads Dataset, increasing the Intersection over Union (IoU) of road class by at least 3% and the overall F1 score by at least 2%. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Deep Learning and Digital Image Processing)
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12 pages, 2428 KiB  
Article
Understanding the Barriers to Prostate Cancer Population-Based Early Detection Programs: The PRAISE-U BEST Survey
by Katharina Beyer, Renée C. A. Leenen, Lionne D. F. Venderbos, Jozien Helleman, Sebastiaan Remmers, Vera Vasilyeva, Juan Gomez Rivas, Erik Briers, Thomas Frese, Josep Vilaseca, Shlomo Vinker, Renata Chloupkova, Ondrej Majek, Lieven Annemans, Pieter Vynckier, Partha Basu, Arunah Chandran, Roderick van den Bergh, Sarah Collen, Hendrik van Poppel, Monique J. Roobol and on behalf of the PRAISE-U Consortiumadd Show full author list remove Hide full author list
J. Pers. Med. 2024, 14(7), 751; https://doi.org/10.3390/jpm14070751 - 15 Jul 2024
Viewed by 1953
Abstract
In 2022, the European Commission updated its recommendation on cancer screening, inviting the Member States (MSs) to explore the feasibility of stepwise implementation of population-based screening for prostate cancer (PCa). In line with this recommendation, the PRAISE-U (Prostate Cancer Awareness and Initiative for [...] Read more.
In 2022, the European Commission updated its recommendation on cancer screening, inviting the Member States (MSs) to explore the feasibility of stepwise implementation of population-based screening for prostate cancer (PCa). In line with this recommendation, the PRAISE-U (Prostate Cancer Awareness and Initiative for Screening in the European Union (EU)) project was initiated. As part of the PRAISE-U, we aim to understand the current practice towards early detection in the EU MSs, the barriers to implementing or planning population-based screening programmes, and potential solutions to overcome these barriers. Methods: We adapted the Barriers to Effective Screening Tool (BEST) survey to the PCa context. However, it has not been validated in this context. We translated it into all spoken languages in the EU27 and disseminated it to different stakeholders across the EU using a snowballing approach. Results: We received 410 responses from 55 countries, of which 301 (73%) were from the 27 EU MSs. The most represented stakeholder group was urologists (218 (54%)), followed by general practitioners (GPs) (83 (21%)), patient representatives (35 (9%)), policy stakeholders (27 (7%)), researchers (23 (6%)), oncologists, pathologists, radiologists, nurses, and others (16 (4%)) and one industry representative. Among all respondents, 286 (69%) reported the absence of a population-based screening programme, mainly attributed to resource limitations and a lack of political and medical society support. Out of these 286 respondents, 196 (69%) indicated that opportunistic screening is being applied in their country, and 199 (70%) expressed their support for population-based screening programmes (which was highest amongst patient representatives and urologists and lowest amongst GPs and policy stakeholders). The highest scored barriers were lack of political support, insufficient operational resources, and inadequate participation. Suggested solutions to overcome these included awareness campaigns, consensus meetings, political lobbying and European guidelines (to overcome political support barriers), compatible IT systems (to overcome operational barriers), and easy access (to overcome participation barriers). Conclusions: Participants have noted the presence of opportunistic screening, and particularly urologists and patient representatives expressed their support for the establishment of a population-based PCa screening programme. Nevertheless, successful implementation of population-based screening programmes is complex; it requires political and medical society support, operational resources and capacity, awareness campaigns, as well as the development of protocols, guidelines, and legal frameworks. Full article
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14 pages, 2302 KiB  
Article
A Multi-Scale Attention Fusion Network for Retinal Vessel Segmentation
by Shubin Wang, Yuanyuan Chen and Zhang Yi
Appl. Sci. 2024, 14(7), 2955; https://doi.org/10.3390/app14072955 - 31 Mar 2024
Cited by 7 | Viewed by 1894
Abstract
The structure and function of retinal vessels play a crucial role in diagnosing and treating various ocular and systemic diseases. Therefore, the accurate segmentation of retinal vessels is of paramount importance to assist a clinical diagnosis. U-Net has been highly praised for its [...] Read more.
The structure and function of retinal vessels play a crucial role in diagnosing and treating various ocular and systemic diseases. Therefore, the accurate segmentation of retinal vessels is of paramount importance to assist a clinical diagnosis. U-Net has been highly praised for its outstanding performance in the field of medical image segmentation. However, with the increase in network depth, multiple pooling operations may lead to the problem of crucial information loss. Additionally, handling the insufficient processing of local context features caused by skip connections can affect the accurate segmentation of retinal vessels. To address these problems, we proposed a novel model for retinal vessel segmentation. The proposed model is implemented based on the U-Net architecture, with the addition of two blocks, namely, an MsFE block and MsAF block, between the encoder and decoder at each layer of the U-Net backbone. The MsFE block extracts low-level features from different scales, while the MsAF block performs feature fusion across various scales. Finally, the output of the MsAF block replaces the skip connection in the U-Net backbone. Experimental evaluations on the DRIVE dataset, CHASE_DB1 dataset, and STARE dataset demonstrated that MsAF-UNet exhibited excellent segmentation performance compared with the state-of-the-art methods. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Application of Machine Vision and Deep Learning Technology)
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12 pages, 2164 KiB  
Systematic Review
Health Policy for Prostate Cancer Early Detection in the European Union and the Impact of Opportunistic Screening: PRAISE-U Consortium
by Katharina Beyer, Renée Leenen, Lionne D. F. Venderbos, Jozien Helleman, Frederique Denijs, Wichor Bramer, Vera Vasilyeva, Erik Briers, Juan Gomez Rivas, Renata Chloupkova, Ondrej Majek, Lieven Annemans, Pieter Vynckier, Partha Basu, Arunah Chandran, Roderick van den Bergh, Sarah Collen, Hendrik van Poppel, Monique J. Roobol and on behalf of the PRAISE-U Consortium
J. Pers. Med. 2024, 14(1), 84; https://doi.org/10.3390/jpm14010084 - 11 Jan 2024
Cited by 11 | Viewed by 3852
Abstract
With the new policy recommendation in 2022 to explore the possibilities of screening for prostate cancer by the European Commission, the landscape for prostate cancer early detection is evolving. In line with this recommendation, the PRAISE-U project aims to evaluate the early detection [...] Read more.
With the new policy recommendation in 2022 to explore the possibilities of screening for prostate cancer by the European Commission, the landscape for prostate cancer early detection is evolving. In line with this recommendation, the PRAISE-U project aims to evaluate the early detection and diagnosis of prostate cancer through customised and risk-based screening programmes, with the goal to align protocols across European Union member states. This systematic review is part of the PRAISE-U project, with the goal to review the policy, medical guideline recommendations, and the current level of opportunistic screening presented in the scientific literature on prostate cancer early detection from 2016 to 2023 in European Union member states. An extensive literature search was performed on 1 June 2023 in a large number of databases, including Embase.com, Medline (Ovid), Web of Science Core Collection, Google Scholar, and Policy Commons. We identified 318 articles (qualitative, quantitative, and reviews), of which 41 were included in the full-text screening. Seventeen articles were ultimately identified as eligible for inclusion. The included articles revealed significant variations towards PSA-based early detection policies for prostate cancer in nine European countries. Despite official recommendations, opportunistic screening was prevalent across all nine countries regardless of recommendations for or against PSA-based early detection. This systematic review suggests that the current early detection policies are not fit for purpose. High levels of opportunistic screening and overdiagnosis persist, prompting policy recommendations for standardised guidelines, informed decision making, and increased awareness to improve efficiency and effectiveness in early detection. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Epidemiology)
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13 pages, 1598 KiB  
Article
Navigating through the Controversies and Emerging Paradigms in Early Detection of Prostate Cancer: Bridging the Gap from Classic RCTs to Modern Population-Based Pilot Programs
by Juan Gómez Rivas, Renée C. A. Leenen, Lionne D. F. Venderbos, Jozien Helleman, Irene de la Parra, Vera Vasilyeva, Jesús Moreno-Sierra, Partha Basu, Arunah Chandran, Roderick C. N. van den Bergh, Sarah Collen, Hein Van Poppel, Monique J. Roobol, Katharina Beyer and on behalf of the PRAISE-U Consortium
J. Pers. Med. 2023, 13(12), 1677; https://doi.org/10.3390/jpm13121677 - 1 Dec 2023
Cited by 5 | Viewed by 2415
Abstract
Over the last three decades, the European Randomized Study of Screening for Prostate Cancer (ERSPC) and the US-based Prostate, Lung, Colorectal and Ovarian (PLCO) Cancer Screening have steered the conversation around the early detection of prostate cancer. These two randomized trials assessed the [...] Read more.
Over the last three decades, the European Randomized Study of Screening for Prostate Cancer (ERSPC) and the US-based Prostate, Lung, Colorectal and Ovarian (PLCO) Cancer Screening have steered the conversation around the early detection of prostate cancer. These two randomized trials assessed the effect of screening on prostate cancer disease-specific mortality. Elevated PSA levels were followed by a systematic sextant prostate biopsy. Standard repeat testing intervals were applied. After controversies from 2009 to 2016 due to contradicting results of the two trials, the results aligned in 2016 and showed that early PSA detection reduces prostate cancer-specific mortality. However, overdiagnosis rates of up to 50% were reported, and this sparked an intense debate on harms and benefits for almost 20 years. The balance between harms and benefits is highly debated and has initiated further research to investigate new ways of early detection. In the meantime, the knowledge and tools for the diagnostic algorithm improved. This is a continuously ongoing effort which focuses on individual risk-based screening algorithms that preserve the benefits of the purely PSA-based screening algorithms, while reducing the side effects. An important push towards investigating new techniques for early detection came from the European Commission on the 20th of September 2022. The European Commission published its updated recommendation to investigate prostate, lung, and gastric cancer early detection programs. This opened a new window of opportunity to move away from the trial setting to population-based early detection settings. With this review, we aim to review 30 years of historical evidence of prostate cancer screening, which led to the initiation of the ‘The Prostate Cancer Awareness and Initiative for Screening in the European Union’ (PRAISE-U) project, which aims to encourage the early detection and diagnosis of PCa through customized and risk-based screening programs. Full article
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10 pages, 848 KiB  
Review
Sponge–Microbial Symbiosis and Marine Extremozymes: Current Issues and Prospects
by Praise Tochukwu Nnaji, H. Ruth Morse, Emmanuel Adukwu and Rachael U. Chidugu-Ogborigbo
Sustainability 2022, 14(12), 6984; https://doi.org/10.3390/su14126984 - 7 Jun 2022
Cited by 4 | Viewed by 2729
Abstract
Marine microorganisms have great potential for producing extremozymes. They enter useful relationships like many other organisms in the marine habitat. Sponge–microbial symbiosis enables both sponges and microorganisms to mutually benefit each other while performing their activities within the ecosystem. Sponges, because of their [...] Read more.
Marine microorganisms have great potential for producing extremozymes. They enter useful relationships like many other organisms in the marine habitat. Sponge–microbial symbiosis enables both sponges and microorganisms to mutually benefit each other while performing their activities within the ecosystem. Sponges, because of their nature as marine cosmopolitan benthic epifaunas and filter feeders, serve as a host for many extremophilic marine microorganisms. Potential extremozymes from microbial symbionts are largely dependent on their successful relationship. Extremozymes have found relevance in food processing, bioremediation, detergent, and drug production. Species diversity approach, industrial-scale bioremediation, integrative bioremediation software, government and industrial support are considered. The high cost of sampling, limited research outcomes, low species growth in synthetic media, laborious nature of metagenomics projects, difficulty in the development of synthetic medium, limited number of available experts, and technological knowhow are current challenges. The unique properties of marine extremozymes underpin their application in industry and biotechnological processes. There is therefore an urgent need for the development of cost-effective methods with government and industry support. Full article
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10 pages, 213 KiB  
Article
“It’s Your Breath in Our Lungs”: Sean Feucht’s Praise and Worship Music Protests and the Theological Problem of Pandemic Response in the U.S.
by Adam A. Perez
Religions 2022, 13(1), 47; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13010047 - 4 Jan 2022
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 8051
Abstract
In response to U.S. government restrictions imposed as part of a nationwide response to the COVID-19 pandemic, charismatic worship leader Sean Feucht began a series of worship concerts. Feucht positioned these protests as expressions of Christian religious freedom in opposition to mandated church [...] Read more.
In response to U.S. government restrictions imposed as part of a nationwide response to the COVID-19 pandemic, charismatic worship leader Sean Feucht began a series of worship concerts. Feucht positioned these protests as expressions of Christian religious freedom in opposition to mandated church closings and a perceived double-standard regarding the large gatherings of protesters over police violence against Black and Brown persons. Government restrictions challenged the sine qua non liturgical act of encounter with God for evangelicals, Pentecostals, and Charismatics: congregational singing in Praise and Worship. However, as Feucht’s itinerant worship concerts traversed urban spaces across the U.S. to protest these restrictions, the events gained a double valence. Feucht and event attendees sought to channel God’s power through musical worship to overturn government mandates and, along the way, they invoked longstanding social and racial prejudices toward urban spaces. In this essay, I argue that Feucht’s events reveal complex theological motivations that weave together liturgical-theological, social, and political concerns. Deciphering this complex tapestry requires a review of both the history of evangelical engagement with urban spaces and the theological history of Praise and Worship. Together, these two sets of historical resources generate a useful frame for considering how Feucht, as a charismatic musical worship leader, attempts to wield spiritual power through musical praise to change political situations and the social conditions. Full article
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