Abstract:Clinical trials are central to evidence-based medicine, yet many struggle to meet enrollment targets, despite the availability of over half a million trials listed on ClinicalTrials.gov, which attracts approximately two million users monthly. Existing retrieval techniques, largely based on keyword and embedding-similarity matching between patient profiles and eligibility criteria, often struggle with low recall, low precision, and limited interpretability due to complex constraints. We propose SatIR, a scalable clinical trial retrieval method based on constraint satisfaction, enabling high-precision and interpretable matching of patients to relevant trials. Our approach uses formal methods -- Satisfiability Modulo Theories (SMT) and relational algebra -- to efficiently represent and match key constraints from clinical trials and patient records. Beyond leveraging established medical ontologies and conceptual models, we use Large Language Models (LLMs) to convert informal reasoning regarding ambiguity, implicit clinical assumptions, and incomplete patient records into explicit, precise, controllable, and interpretable formal constraints. Evaluated on 59 patients and 3,621 trials, SatIR outperforms TrialGPT on all three evaluated retrieval objectives. It retrieves 32%-72% more relevant-and-eligible trials per patient, improves recall over the union of useful trials by 22-38 points, and serves more patients with at least one useful trial. Retrieval is fast, requiring 2.95 seconds per patient over 3,621 trials. These results show that SatIR is scalable, effective, and interpretable.
Abstract:Classification using sparse oblique random forests provides guarantees on uncertainty and confidence while controlling for specific error types. However, they use more data and more compute than other tree ensembles because they create deep trees and need to sort or histogram linear combinations of data at runtime. We provide a method for dynamically switching between histograms and sorting to find the best split. We further optimize histogram construction using vector intrinsics. Evaluating this on large datasets, our optimizations speedup training by 1.7-2.5x compared to existing oblique forests and 1.5-2x compared to standard random forests. We also provide a GPU and hybrid CPU-GPU implementation.




Abstract:In recent years, Neural Radiance Fields (NeRF) have demonstrated significant advantages in representing and synthesizing 3D scenes. Explicit NeRF models facilitate the practical NeRF applications with faster rendering speed, and also attract considerable attention in NeRF compression due to its huge storage cost. To address the challenge of the NeRF compression study, in this paper, we construct a new dataset, called Explicit_NeRF_QA. We use 22 3D objects with diverse geometries, textures, and material complexities to train four typical explicit NeRF models across five parameter levels. Lossy compression is introduced during the model generation, pivoting the selection of key parameters such as hash table size for InstantNGP and voxel grid resolution for Plenoxels. By rendering NeRF samples to processed video sequences (PVS), a large scale subjective experiment with lab environment is conducted to collect subjective scores from 21 viewers. The diversity of content, accuracy of mean opinion scores (MOS), and characteristics of NeRF distortion are comprehensively presented, establishing the heterogeneity of the proposed dataset. The state-of-the-art objective metrics are tested in the new dataset. Best Person correlation, which is around 0.85, is collected from the full-reference objective metric. All tested no-reference metrics report very poor results with 0.4 to 0.6 correlations, demonstrating the need for further development of more robust no-reference metrics. The dataset, including NeRF samples, source 3D objects, multiview images for NeRF generation, PVSs, MOS, is made publicly available at the following location: https://github.com/LittlericeChloe/Explicit_NeRF_QA.