window.dataLayer = window.dataLayer || []; function gtag(){dataLayer.push(arguments);} gtag('js', new Date()); gtag('config', 'UA-115625534-1');
List

CVPR workshop paper on activity recognition in the ICU is accepted. Congratulations to Anis and Kumar!

 

Patients staying in the Intensive Care Unit (ICU) have a severely disrupted circadian rhythm. Due to patients’ critical medical condition, ICU physicians and nurses have to provide round-the-clock clinical care, further disrupting patients’ circadian rhythm. Mistimed family visits during rest-time can also disrupt patients’ circadian rhythm. Currently, such effects are only reported based on hospital visitation policies rather than the actual number of visitors and care providers in the room. To quantify visitation disruptions, we used a deep Mask R-CNN model, a deep learning framework for object instance segmentation to detect and quantify the number of individuals in the ICU unit. This study represents the first effort to automatically quantify visitations in an ICU room, which could have implications in terms of policy adjustment, as well as circadian rhythm investigation. Our model achieved precision of 0.97 and recall of 0.67, with F1 score of 0.79 for detecting disruptions in the ICU units.

  Posts

1 2 3
March 15th, 2022

Natural Language Processing: Analyzing Clinical and Mental Health Notes

In contrast to the structured clinical data typically used for administrative purposes, clinical notes are more nuanced and are primarily […]

April 7th, 2021

Dr. Rashidi at ISN Virtual World Congress of Nephrology 2021

Dr. Rashidi will join Dr. Azra Bihorac and Dr. Yoshua Bengio in a discussion titled “How to achieve equitable, inclusive, and ethical AI development and implementation” at ISN Virtual World Congress of Nephrology 2021.

February 4th, 2021

Human Activity Recognition Using Inertial, Physiological and Environmental Sensors

A Comprehensive Survey  Human Activity Recognition Research Paper [link] Nowadays, the aging population is becoming one of the world’s primary […]

June 6th, 2019

NIH Mitchel Max Award- Finalist

Dr. Rashidi is nominated as one of the three finalists for the National Institute of Health (NIH) Mitchel Max Award […]

May 3rd, 2019

HWCOE Excellence Award

Original Article: Link Parisa Rashidi, Ph.D., areceived the HWCOE Excellence Award for Assistant Professors. This award is given to faculty […]

May 3rd, 2019

Provost Excellence Award

Main Article: Link Parisa Rashidi, Ph.D., an assistant professor in the J. Crayton Pruitt Family Department of Biomedical Engineering, has […]

February 25th, 2019

News Coverage in CBS

A first of its kind technology developed here in Gainesville can predict the probability and possible cause of death in […]

February 25th, 2019

News Coverage in Fox13

Artificial intelligence used in the ICU to predict mortality, news story: Watch the video here: link

February 22nd, 2019

News Coverage in Alligator Newspaper

Excerpt from the original story:   UF researchers can now assess and treat a patient’s condition faster than ever before […]

February 19th, 2019

News Coverage in UFHealth News

n a hospital’s intensive care unit, doctors get a cascade of data about each patient’s condition that can be challenging […]