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New modes of technology are offering unprecedented opportunities to unobtrusively collect data about people's behavior. While there are many use cases for such information, we explore its utility for predicting multiple clinical assessment scores. Because clinical assessments are typically used as screening tools for impairment and disease, such as mild cognitive impairment (MCI), automatically mapping behavioral data to assessment scores can help detect changes in health and behavior across time. In this article, we aim to extract behavior markers from two modalities, a smart home environment and a custom digital memory notebook app, for mapping to 10 clinical assessments that are relevant for monitoring MCI onset and changes in cognitive health. Smart-home-based behavior markers reflect hourly, daily, and weekly activity patterns, while app-based behavior markers reflect app usage and writing content/style derived from free-form journal entries. We describe machine learning techniques for fusing these multimodal behavior markers and utilizing joint prediction. We evaluate our approach using three regression algorithms and data from 14 participants with MCI living in a smart-home environment. We observed moderate to large correlations between predicted and ground-truth assessment scores, ranging from r = 0.601 to r = 0.871 for each clinical assessment.more » « less
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Abstract Background Behavior and health are inextricably linked. As a result, continuous wearable sensor data offer the potential to predict clinical measures. However, interruptions in the data collection occur, which create a need for strategic data imputation. Objective The objective of this work is to adapt a data generation algorithm to impute multivariate time series data. This will allow us to create digital behavior markers that can predict clinical health measures. Methods We created a bidirectional time series generative adversarial network to impute missing sensor readings. Values are imputed based on relationships between multiple fields and multiple points in time, for single time points or larger time gaps. From the complete data, digital behavior markers are extracted and are mapped to predicted clinical measures. Results We validate our approach using continuous smartwatch data for n = 14 participants. When reconstructing omitted data, we observe an average normalized mean absolute error of 0.0197. We then create machine learning models to predict clinical measures from the reconstructed, complete data with correlations ranging from r = 0.1230 to r = 0.7623. This work indicates that wearable sensor data collected in the wild can be used to offer insights on a person's health in natural settings.more » « less
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A massive amount of data generated today on platforms such as social networks, telecommunication networks, and the internet in general can be represented as graph streams. Activity in a network’s underlying graph generates a sequence of edges in the form of a stream; for example, a social network may generate a graph stream based on the interactions (edges) between different users (nodes) over time. While many graph mining algorithms have already been developed for analyzing relatively small graphs, graphs that begin to approach the size of real-world networks stress the limitations of such methods due to their dynamic nature and the substantial number of nodes and connections involved. In this paper we present GraphZip, a scalable method for mining interesting patterns in graph streams. GraphZip is inspired by the Lempel-Ziv (LZ) class of compression algorithms, and uses a novel dictionary-based compression approach to discover maximally- compressing patterns in a graph stream. We experimentally show that GraphZip is able to retrieve complex and insightful patterns from large real-world graphs and artificially-generated graphs with ground truth patterns. Additionally, our results demonstrate that GraphZip is both highly efficient and highly effective compared to existing state-of-the-art methods for mining graph streams.more » « less
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Deep learning has been successful in various domains including image recognition, speech recognition and natural language processing. However, the research on its application in graph mining is still in an early stage. Here we present Model R, a neural network model created to provide a deep learning approach to link weight prediction problem. This model extracts knowledge of nodes from known links’ weights and uses this knowledge to predict unknown links’ weights. We demonstrate the power of Model R through experiments and compare it with stochastic block model and its derivatives. Model R shows that deep learning can be successfully applied to link weight prediction and it outperforms stochastic block model and its derivatives by up to 73% in terms of prediction accuracy. We anticipate this new approach to provide effective solutions to more graph mining tasks.more » « less
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Demographic information such as gender, age, ethnicity, level of education, disabilities, employment, and socio-economic status are important in the area of social science, survey and marketing. But it is difficult to obtain the demographic information from users due to reluctance of users to participate and low response rate. Through automated demographics prediction from smart phone sensor data, researchers can obtain this valuable information in a nonintrusive and cost-effective manner. We approach the problem of demographic prediction, namely, classification of gender, age group and job type, through the use of a graphical feature based framework. The framework represents information collected from sensor networks as graphs, extracts useful and relevant graphical features, and predicts demographic information. We evaluated our approach on the Nokia Mobile Phone dataset for the three classification tasks: gender, age-group and job-type. Our approach produced comparable results with most of the state of the art methods while having the additional advantage of general applicability to sensor networks without using sophisticated and application-specific feature generation techniques, background knowledge and special techniques to address class imbalance.more » « less
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