Anna Solovyova

h-index3
2papers
29citations

2 Papers

3.3HCAug 21, 2020
Early Autism Spectrum Disorders Diagnosis Using Eye-Tracking Technology

Anna Solovyova, Sergiy Danylov, Shpenkov Oleksii et al.

While the number of children with diagnosed autism spectrum disorder (ASD) continues to rise from year to year, there is still no universal approach to autism diagnosis and treatment. A great variety of different tools and approaches for the on-site diagnostic are available right now, however, a big percent of parents have no access to them and they tend to search for the available tools and correction programs on the Internet. Lack of money, absence of qualified specialists, and low level of trust to the correction methods are the main issues that affect the in-time diagnoses of ASD and which need to be solved to get the early treatment for the little patients. Understanding the importance of this issue our team decided to investigate new methods of the online autism diagnoses and develop the algorithm that will be able to predict the chances of ASD according to the information from the gaze activity of the child. The results that we got during the experiments show supported our idea that eye-tracking technology is one of the most promising tools for the early detection of the eye-movement features that can be markers of the ASD. Moreover, we have conducted a series of experiments to ensure that our approach has a reliable result on the cheap webcam systems. Thus, this approach can be used as an additional first screening tool for the home monitoring of the early child development and ASD connected disorders monitoring. The further development of eye-tracking based autism diagnosis has a big potential of usage and can be further implemented in the daily practice for practical specialists and parents.

2.0IVAug 7, 2020
X-Ray bone abnormalities detection using MURA dataset

A. Solovyova, I. Solovyov

We introduce the deep network trained on the MURA dataset from the Stanford University released in 2017. Our system is able to detect bone abnormalities on the radiographs and visualise such zones. We found that our solution has the accuracy comparable to the best results that have been achieved by other development teams that used MURA dataset, in particular the overall Kappa score that was achieved by our team is about 0.942 on the wrist, 0.862 on the hand and o.735 on the shoulder (compared to the best available results to this moment on the official web-site 0.931, 0.851 and 0.729 accordingly). However, despite the good results there are a lot of directions for the future enhancement of the proposed technology. We see a big potential in the further development computer aided systems (CAD) for the radiographs as the one that will help practical specialists diagnose bone fractures as well as bone oncology cases faster and with the higher accuracy.