ML Syll
ML Syll
Course Objective
1. To study the Mathematical background of machine learning.
2. To enable the student to understand the concept of machine learning.
3. To learn the fundamentals of different Neural network architectures.
4. To know the machine learning application in wireless communication and bio-medical.
5. To expose the student to be familiar with a set of well-known supervised, semi-supervised and unsupervised learning
algorithms
V ML IN BIO-MEDICAL 9
Machine Learning in Medical Imaging. Deep Learning for Health Informatics. Deep Learning Automated ECG Noise
Detection and Classification System for Unsupervised Healthcare Monitoring. Techniques for Electronic Health Record
(EHR) Analysis.
Total Instructional Hours 45
Course Outcome
After completion of the course the learner will be able to
CO1: Demonstrate understanding of the mathematical principles underlying machine learning.
CO2: Familiar with the different machine learning techniques and their use cases.
CO3: In a position to formulate machine learning problems corresponding to different applications.
CO4: Able to recognize the characteristics of machine learning techniques that are useful to solve real-world problems.
CO5: In a position to read current research papers, understand the issues and the machine learning based solution
approaches.
REFERENCE BOOKS:
R1-Ian Goodfellow, Yoshua Bengio, and Aaron Courville, “Deep learning”, Cambridge, MA, MIT Press, 2017.
R2-Tom M. Mitchell, “Machine Learning”, McGraw Hill, 1997.
R3-Ethem Alpaydın, “Introduction to machine learning”, MIT Press, 3rd Edition, 2014.
R4-M. N. Wernick, Y. Yang, J. G. Brankov, G. Yourganov and S. C. Strother, “Machine Learning in Medical Imaging”,
IEEE Signal Processing Magazine, vol. 27, no. 4, pp. 25-38, July 2010.
R5-Ravì et al., “Deep Learning for Health Informatics,” IEEE Journal of Biomedical and Health Informatics, vol. 21, no.
1, pp. 4-21, Jan. 2017.
R6-U. Satija, B. Ramkumar and M. S. Manikandan, “Automated ECG Noise Detection and Classification”, IEEE Journal
of Biomedical and Health Informatics PP(99), March 2017.
R7-“System for Unsupervised Healthcare Monitoring,” IEEE Journal of Biomedical and Health Informatics, vol. 22, no.
3, pp. 722-732, May 2018.
R8-B. Shickel, P. J. Tighe, A. Bihorac and P. Rashidi, “Deep EHR: A Survey of Recent Advances in Deep Learning
Techniques for Electronic Health Record (EHR) Analysis,” IEEE Journal of Biomedical and Health Informatics, vol. 22,
no. 5, pp. 1589-1604, Sept. 2018.
R9-A. Heuser, S. Picek, S. Guilley and N. Mentens, “Lightweight Ciphers and their Side-channel Resilience,” IEEE
Transactions on Computers.