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Full-Text Articles in Computer Sciences

On Vulnerabilities Of Building Automation Systems, Michael Cash Jan 2024

On Vulnerabilities Of Building Automation Systems, Michael Cash

Graduate Thesis and Dissertation 2023-2024

Building automation systems (BAS) have become more commonplace in personal and commercial environments in recent years. They provide many functions for comfort and ease of use, from automating room temperature and shading, to monitoring equipment data and status. Even though their convenience is beneficial, their security has become an increased concerned in recent years. This research shows an extensive study on building automation systems and identifies vulnerabilities in some of the most common building communication protocols, BACnet and KNX. First, we explore the BACnet protocol, exploring its Standard BACnet objects and properties. An automation tool is designed and implemented to …


Biomarker Identification For Breast Cancer Types Using Feature Selection And Explainable Ai Methods, David E. La Rosa Giraud Jan 2023

Biomarker Identification For Breast Cancer Types Using Feature Selection And Explainable Ai Methods, David E. La Rosa Giraud

Honors Undergraduate Theses

This paper investigates the impact the LASSO, mRMR, SHAP, and Reinforcement Feature Selection techniques on random forest models for the breast cancer subtypes markers ER, HER2, PR, and TN as well as identifying a small subset of biomarkers that could potentially cause the disease and explain them using explainable AI techniques. This is important because in areas such as healthcare understanding why the model makes a specific decision is important it is a diagnostic of an individual which requires reliable AI. Another contribution is using feature selection methods to identify a small subset of biomarkers capable of predicting if a …


Exploring The Feasibility Of Machine Learning Techniques In Recognizing Complex Human Activities, Shengnan Hu Jan 2023

Exploring The Feasibility Of Machine Learning Techniques In Recognizing Complex Human Activities, Shengnan Hu

Graduate Thesis and Dissertation 2023-2024

This dissertation introduces several technical innovations that improve the ability of machine learning models to recognize a wide range of complex human activities. As human sensor data becomes more abundant, the need to develop algorithms for understanding and interpreting complex human actions has become increasingly important. Our research focuses on three key areas: multi-agent activity recognition, multi-person pose estimation, and multimodal fusion.

To tackle the problem of monitoring coordinated team activities from spatio-temporal traces, we introduce a new framework that incorporates field of view data to predict team performance. Our framework uses Spatial Temporal Graph Convolutional Networks (ST-GCN) and recurrent …


Genetic Algorighm Representation Selection Impact On Binary Classification Problems, Stephen V. Maldonado Jan 2022

Genetic Algorighm Representation Selection Impact On Binary Classification Problems, Stephen V. Maldonado

Honors Undergraduate Theses

In this thesis, we explore the impact of problem representation on the ability for the genetic algorithms (GA) to evolve a binary prediction model to predict whether a physical therapist is paid above or below the median amount from Medicare. We explore three different problem representations, the vector GA (VGA), the binary GA (BGA), and the proportional GA (PGA). We find that all three representations can produce models with high accuracy and low loss that are better than Scikit-Learn’s logistic regression model and that all three representations select the same features; however, the PGA representation tends to create lower weights …


Multizoom Activity Recognition Using Machine Learning, Raymond Smith Jan 2005

Multizoom Activity Recognition Using Machine Learning, Raymond Smith

Electronic Theses and Dissertations

In this thesis we present a system for detection of events in video. First a multiview approach to automatically detect and track heads and hands in a scene is described. Then, by making use of epipolar, spatial, trajectory, and appearance constraints, objects are labeled consistently across cameras (zooms). Finally, we demonstrate a new machine learning paradigm, TemporalBoost, that can recognize events in video. One aspect of any machine learning algorithm is in the feature set used. The approach taken here is to build a large set of activity features, though TemporalBoost itself is able to work with any feature set …