Title

Takefuji Lab. is a neural and multimedia center for solving real-world problems including applied AI, cybersecurity, blockchain, VLSI CAD, medical imaging, molecular biology, operations research, mathematics, games, management science, agriculture, civil engineering and constructions, financial engineering, computer-art, energy-harvesting, science policy and other intractable problems.

Our projects have been or had been supported by Information-technology Promotion Agency of METI, TEPCO, necmagnus, Mitsubishi( retina camera, wireless), Tripwire, Science Park, Device Drivers, instructional design, freegene, ousia, Beat, suzuki, JR-east, Obayashi, Kajima, mitsubishi-enpitsu, toadoro, quality, zenta, aizu_denryoku, JWA, kankyoResearch, creditSaison, archeco, inclusionjapan, niigata-techno, daiyufreeze, MaBeee, Morita, horie-sharyo, tekken, DID, BIMobject, ando-hazama, agreement, cvcjapan, Weihai, kisco, JinJing, blockware, Sho-patents, shimizu, Takara Leben, MIZ, kanematsu, mitani, oginoya, optyeco, rise, ceraft, tomoesoroban, and other organizations.

We have been supporting the CEDECI project in Argentina from Nov., 1995 , the PSDI (Philippine Software Development Institute) of National Computer Center of the Philippine government from March 30, 1997, and VITTI (Vietnam Information Technology Training Institute) from June 4, 1998, Royal Scientific Society project in Jordan from Jan. 28, 2001 CTTISC, SriLanka project from Dec. 2 of 2003 through the assistance of the JICA, and Multimedia University of Malaysia. We have also been supporting Tomoe soroban, JNSA, Institute of tropical medicine , Japan Food Service Association , and TrustE

 


Title Romanesco_photoed_by_takefuji

--------lectured by Yoshiyasu Takefuji-------- 最終講義

--------github by Yoshiyasu Takefuji-------- GitHub

--------YouTube by Yoshiyasu Takefuji-------- YouTube

--------researchgate by Yoshiyasu Takefuji-------- researchgate

--------google scholar by Yoshiyasu Takefuji-------- google scholar

--------scopus score for Yoshiyasu Takefuji-------- scopus scores

--------facebook by Yoshiyasu Takefuji-------- facebook

--------PyPI by Yoshiyasu Takefuji-------- PyPI

--------ORCID for Yoshiyasu Takefuji-------- ORCID


--------Cell papers by Yoshiyasu Takefuji--------

1. White-box machine learning is not the first attempt for alleviating "black box" problems Cell, comment June 11 (2019)

--------NEJM, Nature, Elsevier, T&F related papers by Yoshiyasu Takefuji--------

99. A Shadow Cost of Jacobian Accumulation in Computation Graph of Backpropagation IJERT (2024)

98. Leveraging Human-AI Collaboration to Visualize Age-Related Diabetes Features Using Dataset Arch. Gerontol. Geriatr. Plus (2024)

97. Impact of COVID-19 on arthritis with generative AI Int. Immunopharmacology (2024)

96. Hydrogen inhalation therapy for inflammation and eye diseases: A Review of the Literature Nature Eye (2024)

95. Characterizing IoC of Covid-19 Spam Campaign by Open-Source based Geographic Analysis IJCA (2024)

94. Drug-induced macular edema. Nature Eye (2024)

93. Oral health and diabetes.  British Dental Journal (2024)

92. Exploring Trends in Erectile Dysfunction Research from 2017 to 2023: A Focus on COVID-19, Mental Health, Psychiatry, and Drug.  Sexuality&Disability (2024)

91. Vaccine effects on COVID-19 infection with bivalent boosting by age group.  Drug Resistance Updates (2024)

90. Generative AI for Diabetologists: A Concise Tutorial on Dataset Analysis Journal of Diabetes & Metabolic Disorders (2024)

89. Exploring the Influence of COVID-19 on Studies of Frailty and Diabetes: A Concise Review Archives of Gerontology and Geriatrics Plus (2023)

88. Contradictory resuscitation procedure for cardiopulmonary arrest Air Medical Journal (2023)

87. Generative AI for Analysis and Identification of Medicare Improper Payments by Provider Type and HCPC Code   Exploratory Research in Clinical and Social Pharmacy (2023)

86. Artificial intelligence universal biomarker prediction tool. Journal of Thrombosis and Thrombolysis (2023)

85. Prospects of hydrogen medicine based on its protective effects on mitochondrial function Molecular hydrogen in health and disease (2024)

84. Hypothesized mechanism of amelioration of colitis by Clostridium butyricum as a hydrogen-producing bacterium. Med Gas Res Med Gas Res (2024)

83. Medical Application of Molecular Hydrogen to Diabetic Kidney Disease: Therapeutic Potential through Improvements in Mitochondrial Function Biomedicines. (2023)

82. Impact of COVID-19 on mortality and excess mortality of midlife from 40 to 64 age groups Aging and Health Research. (2023)

81. Effective Inactivation of Airborne Noroviruses Using Platinum Nanoparticles on Cloth Masks Nano-Structures & Nano-Objects. (2023)

80. An Urgent Call to Action: The Absolute Necessity to Ban Asbestos Production and Sales. Science of the Total Environment. (2023)

79. Frailty and Eye Diseases: A Review of the Literature Nature Eye. (2023)

78. A Retrospective Cohort Study on Breast Cancer Screening: Comparing False-Positive and False-Negative Rates from Two BCSC Databases Ethics, Medicine and Public Health. (2023)

77. Experiments of Randomized Hints on an Axiom of Infinite-Valued Lukasiewicz Logic International Journal of Novel Research in Computer Science and Software Engineering. (2023)

76. Sustainable water captured from air for fulfilling the SDGs. Environment, Development and Sustainability. (2023)

75. COVID-19 lag time and case fatality rate calculation tool, as well as a tool to identify when policymakers made mistakes. NetMAHIB (2023)

74. Time-series COVID-19 policy outcome analysis of the 50 U.S. states Clinical Immunology Communications (2023)

73. An Updated Tutorial on Reproducible PyPI Applications for Advancing Chemometrics and Boosting Learner Motivation. Chemometrics and Intelligent Laboratory Systems (2023)

72. Impact-of-COVID-19 on Mortality and Implications for Adolescent and Young-Adult Healthcare Health Care Transitions (2023)

71. Impact of COVID-19 on mental health in the US with generative AI   Asian J Psychiatr (2023)

70. Characterizing Adaptive Optimizer in CNN by Reverse Mode Differentiation from Full-Scratch IJAINN (2023)

69. International companies and governments need to be alerted to a fatal flaw in DOI management policy to prevent security breaches. Digital Society (2023)

68. A brief tutorial on generative AI British Dental Journal (2023)

67. Bayesian analysis with inaccurate rapid antigen testing for detecting someone is positive Physica A: Statistical Mechanics and its Applications (2023)

66. Oral frailty and associated diseases British Dental Journal (2023)

65. A time-series COVID-19 policy outcome analysis tool to measure human behavior from a herd instinct perspective Health and Technology (2023)

64. Why the power of diversity does not always produce better groups and societies. BioSystems (2023)

63. Review of Hikikomori: A Global Health Issue, Identification and Treatment  Asian Journal of Psychiatry (2023)

62. Impact of COVID-19 on mortality under 5 years old Nature's Pediatric Research (2023)

61. Credibility on scholar performance evaluation using Google Scholar and ResearchGate Journal of Scholarly Publishing (2023)

60. Case report on enormous economic losses caused by fraud from Japan to the world Journal of Economic Criminology (2023)

59. Hydrogen Inhalation Therapy May Ameliorate Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis Medical Gas Research (2023)

58. Inexpensive all-season passive thin metal film for energy savings in cities Energy for sustainable development (2023)

57. COVID and perio. British Dental Journal (2023)

56. Effectiveness of vaccination with symptoms by age groups Int Immunopharmacol (2023)

55. hiscovid for visualizing and identifying when policymakers made mistakes against COVID-19 Software Impacts (2023)

54.A constrained recursion algorithm for tree-structured LSTM with mini-batch SGD IJSCAI (2023)

53. The best and sustainable COVID-19 policy in the world IEEE Trans. Comput. Soc. Syst. (2022)

52. scorecovid for scoring individual country COVID-19 policies in the world Software Impacts (2022)

51. A Curious New Result of Resolution Strategies in Negation-Limited Inverters Problem IAENG International Journal of Computer Science (2022)

50. How to Build Disaster-Resilient Cities and Societies for making people happy Building and Environment (2022)

49. Policy analysis and data mining tools for controlling COVID-19 policies NetMAHIB (2022)

48. COVID-19 policy analysis for 10 European countries Journal of Public Health (2022)

47. Time-series COVID-19 policymaker analysis of the UAE, Taiwan, New Zealand, Japan and Hungary Dialogues in Health (2022)

46. Sustainable policy: Don’t get infected and don’t infect others J. Hazard. Mater. Adv. (2022)

45. Analysis of a Human Meta-Strategy for Agents with Active and Passive Strategies Applied Sciences (2022)

44. Discovering COVID-19 state sustainable policies for mitigating and ending the pandemic Cities (2022)

43. New Japan dental policy British Dental Journal (2022)

42. Conventional drug acts as a “rifle gun” while hydrogen as a “machine gun” Medical Gas Research (2022)

41. Security enhancement of third parties is needed in global supply chain management Journal of Applied Security Research (2022)

40. Enhancing disaster resilience by sustainable technologies Urban governance (2022)

39. Today’s Common Sense in Science can be Changed Tomorrow Journal of Educational Thought (2022)

38.The overlooked benefits of hydrogen-producing bacteria Medical Gas Research (2022)

37.A herd immunity approach to the COVID-19 pandemic? Health and Technology (2022)

36.Set operations in Python for translational medicine IJTM (2022)

35.Successful treatment of myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome using hydrogen gas: Four case reports Med. Gas Res. (2024)

34.Guidelines for the selection of hydrogen gas inhalers based on hydrogen explosion accidents Med. Gas Res. (2022)

33.Realizing brain therapy with “smart medicine”: Mechanism and case report of molecular hydrogen inhalation for Parkinson’s disease Med. Gas Res. (2024)

32. Molecular Hydrogen as a Medical Gas for the Treatment of Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (ME/CFS): Possible Efficacy Based on a Literature Review, Frontiers in Neurology, Frontiers in Neurology (2022)

31. deathdaily: A Python Package Index for Predicting the number of daily COVID-19 deaths NetMAHIB (2022)

30. Correspondence in NEJM NEJM(2021)

29. A New Perspective of Paramodulation Complexity by Solving 100 Sliding Block Puzzles IJAIA (2021)

28. Greener technology of lithium batteries is needed for healthy humans and nature JEMEP(2021)

27. Python programming in PyPI for translational medicine IJTM(2021)

26. SCORECOVID: A Python Package Index for scoring the individual policies against COVID-19 Healthcare Analytics (2021)

25. Technological forecasting plays a key role in mitigating the pandemic JIPH (2021)

24. Analysis of digital fences against COVID-19 Health & Technology (2021)

23. A Randomized Hyperparameter Tuning of Adaptive Moment Estimation Optimizer of Binary Tree-Structured LSTM IJACSA(2021)

22. Molecular Hydrogen as a Novel Antitumor Agent: Possible Mechanisms Underlying Gene Expression IJMS(2021)

21. Converting detailed estimates to primary estimates with data augmentation AdvEngInform(2021)

20. Molecular Hydrogen as a Novel Protective Agent against Pre-Symptomatic Diseases IJMS(2021)

19. Protective effects of hydrogen gas inhalation on radiation-induced bone marrow damage in cancer patients: a retrospective observational study Medical Gas Research (2021)

18. Molecular Hydrogen as a Potential Clinically Applicable Radioprotective Agent IJMS (2021)

17. Artificial Intelligence suggests that UAE needs to mitigate the small COVID-19 resurgence Dubai Medical Journal (2021)

16. Fourier analysis using the number of COVID-19 daily deaths in the US Epidemiology&infection (2021)

15. Potential Therapeutic Applications of Hydrogen in Chronic Inflammatory Diseases: Possible Inhibiting Role on Mitochondrial Stress IJMS (2021)

14. Illogical smart highway management policy in Japan Transportation Engineering (2021)

13. Resilient Secured Education System for Online Lectures During the Pandemic Journal of Applied Security Research (2021)

12. Sustainable protein alternatives, Trends in Food Science & Technolog(2021)

11. Hydrogen Is Promising for Medical Applications Clean Technologies (2020)

10. Japan’s government must seek out expert scientists Nature 586, 200 (2020)

9. Illogical dam policy in Japan Natural Hazards (2020)

8. Airborne precautions are needed against COVID-19 J Infect Public Health (2020)

7. A New Role of Pseudorandom Number as Inductive Inference for Solving Classic Coin-Weighing Puzzles SN Computer Science, May 2020

6. Security Protection Mechanisms Must Be Embedded in Blockchain Applications J. Chem. Educ. 2020, 97, 7, 1819–1820

5. Detection and protection mechanisms against vulnerabilities are needed in blockchain applications European Journal of Human Genetics, 2 March 2020

4. Dental fluoride policy in Japan British Dental Journal 227,71 (2019)

3. Illogical dental amalgam policy by WHO and UNEP British Dental Journal 226,241 (2019)

2. Chemical resistance of quartz over synthetic polycrystalline / monocrystalline sapphires for reproducibility Materials Chemistry and Physics, 2019

1. Double-ice-plug freezing using liquid nitrogen for water pipe repairs Urban Water Journal (2017)

--------Recent Security & reproducibility publications by Yoshiyasu Takefuji--------

22. Security Protection Mechanisms Must Be Embedded in Blockchain Applications J. Chem. Educ., april 2020

21. Detection and protection mechanisms against vulnerabilities are needed in blockchain applications European Journal of Human Genetics, 2 March 2020

20. Chemical resistance of quartz over synthetic polycrystalline / monocrystalline sapphires for reproducibility Materials Chemistry and Physics, 2019

19. Preventing explosions of hydrogen gas inhalers Medical Gas Research, 9,3,160-162,2019

18. Blockchain is vulnerable against classic database approach MOJ App Bio Biomech. 2019;2(5):102‒103

17. Autonomous vehicles must overcome spoofing, silencing, jamming attacks… Science (eLetter, 25 July 2019)

16. Connected vehicle security vulnerabilities IEEE Technology and Society Magazine, 2018

15. A blockchain is fragile against the database approach Science (eLetter, 10 October 2018)

14. Moths spoofing against bats can be used as adversarial attacks against autonomous vehicles Science Advances (eLetter, 23 July 2018)

13. International standards are needed for securing autonomous vehicles Science (eLetter, 14 September 2018)

12. We can learn from the evolution in moths for securing autonomous vehicles Science (eLetter, 9 September 2018)

11. TPM-like authenticity function is needed for securing AI products Science (eLetter, 24 August 2018)

10. Adversarial attacks are striking not only for AI (machine learning) but also for humans and a variety of sensors Science (eLetter, 20 July 2018)

9. The security problems of autonomous vehicles are solvable as long as the facts are disclosed Science (eLetter, 6 July 2018)

8. Infrasound and ultrasound recording is needed for scientific investigation Science (eLetter, 1 July 2018)

7. False charges can be created by mixture DNA samples Science (eLetter, 14 June 2018)

6. Bias effects in forensics can be scientifically alleviated by stochastic computing Science (eLetter, 20 April 2018)

5. Cyber risk scores play a key role in the census Science (eLetter, 22 Feb 2018)

4. The current vehicles are in the Telnet's/HTTP's era: cryptography should be embedded in the autonomous vehicles Science (eLetter, 18 December 2017)

3. Autonomous vehicles must prepare for jamming and spoofing attacks Science (eLetter, 18 December 2017)

2. Embedded security is needed in BMI devices, Science (eLetter, July 20 2017)

1. Black box is not safe at all, Science (eLetter, October 20 2016)

--------Science publications (eLetter, Report) by Yoshiyasu Takefuji--------

211. The virus inactivation efficiency of current UVC air disinfection systems is tremendously low for mass and safe air disinfection in manned public spaces Science (eLetter, 22 Sept. 2021)

210. The US should use the best policy against the COVID-19 pandemic Science (eLetter, 12 March 2021)

209. Good debate needs scientific evidences but the world is illogical Science (eLetter, 15 Jan. 2021)

208. US needs to mitigate the resurged COVID-19 pandemic by the best policy Science (eLetter, 27 Nov. 2020)

207. Public health legal preparedness plays a key role in mitigating the pandemic Science (eLetter, 16 Nov. 2020)

206. Expert scientists should know the past lessons from SARS and MERS Science (eLetter, 23 Oct. 2020)

205. CDC should implement the evidence-based best policy against COVID-19 pandemic Science (eLetter, 22 Oct. 2020)

204. Europe should immediately implement the effective policy based on isolating-all-at-risk strategy for mitigating the pandemic Science (eLetter, 19 Oct. 2020)

203. Real-time surveillance against COVID-19 is needed in Europe Science (eLetter, 14 Oct. 2020)

202. WHO should know the past lessons from SARS and MERS when talking on vaccine Science (eLetter, 27 Sept. 2020)

201. Can we have safe vaccines for COVID-19 in the near future? Science (eLetter, 14 Sept. 2020)

200. Sensitivity tests and sucking ventilations indoor for mitigating COVID-19 Science (eLetter, 10 Sept. 2020)

199. Rule-making by politicians, zoning constituencies by AI Science (eLetter, 3 Sept. 2020)

198. What is going on about regulations of hazardous substances? Science (eLetter, 21 August 2020)

197. Virtual conferences and meetings should be practiced under covid-19 pandemic Science (eLetter, 18 August 2020)

196. Birth rate will be expected to drop during the covid-19 pandemic while there will be a surge after the pandemic Science (eLetter, 12 August 2020)

195. Who should we trust for protecting ourselves against covid-19? Science (eLetter, 5 August 2020)

194. Data of the Radiation Effects Research Foundation should be available in public for wholesome and scientific investigations Science (eLetter, 29 July 2020)

193. Virus weapon is very much stronger than modernized nuclear weapons Science (eLetter, 25 July 2020)

192. Past lessons play a key role in coping with COVID-19 Science (eLetter, 16 June 2020)

191. Global digital school under covid-19 Science (eLetter, 22 April 2020)

190. JYU UNESCO-CCE Online Conference: Embrace the Creativity amidst COVID-19 Crisis on April 21 Science (eLetter, 16 April 2020)

189. Covid-19 pandemic forces us to revise ourselves Science (eLetter, 14 April 2020)

188. What is the best policy for virus management? Science (eLetter, 15 Feb. 2020)

187. A cleaner/greener technology does not mean healthy to humans and nature Science (eLetter, 23 Jan. 2020)

186. Balancing the duality should be considered in evidence-based conclusion Science (eLetter, 16 Jan. 2020)

185. Uncertainties in TSI measurements against global warming Science (eLetter, 21 Dec. 2019)

184. A new global warming policy is needed Science (eLetter, 11 Oct. 2019)

183. The long-term vision is required in the historic turning point like Brexit Science (eLetter, 5 Oct. 2019)

182. Solving reproducibility problems is not so easy Science (eLetter, 25 July 2019)

181. Autonomous vehicles must overcome spoofing, silencing, jamming attacks… Science (eLetter, 25 July 2019)

180. There is no boundary between basic and applied science Science (eLetter, 23 June 2019)

179. Low-cost duality devices will play a key role in incubating new applications Science (eLetter, 8 June 2019)

178. FDA needs the dramatic reform Science (eLetter, 18 May 2019)

177. Black-box in AI is not black box Science (eLetter, 14 May 2019)

176. China can have clean air using the latest coal-fired power plants ScienceAdvances (eLetter, 3 May 2019)

175. China construction industry officially has launched artificial intelligence R&D planning Science (eLetter, 21 January 2019)

174. Illogical actions against global warming using nuclear energy Science (eLetter, 12 January 2019)

173. AI can play a key role in satisfying you with tactics of love Science (eLetter, 20 December 2018)

172. Curiosity outperforms regulations or rules Science (eLetter, 13 December 2018)

171. Machine learning intelligence is addable and shareable Science (eLetter, 6 December 2018)

170. The quality of life is more important than life-span Science (eLetter, 1 December 2018)

169. Regulations might be needed for nutrition supplements Science (eLetter, 1 December 2018)

168. Reconciling patent rights and disclosure of findings in science is needed Science (eLetter, 29 November 2018)

167. The internet censorship should be fixed Science (eLetter, 28 November 2018)

166. Eliminating ambiguity in laws or regulations can reduce our misunderstanding not by sentences but by a set of logic rules Science (eLetter, 19 November 2018)

165. Laws and regulations do not solve chemical weapon problems Science (eLetter, 18 November 2018)

164. What is the best living scheme for achieving high quality life? Science (eLetter, 17 November 2018)

163. Do we need politicians in AI age? Science (eLetter, 14 November 2018)

162. Jellyfish venom is poison as medicine Science (eLetter, 11 November 2018)

161. The technology and science should be used for alleviating accumulated hatred Science (eLetter, 8 November 2018)

160. Government plans should be more flexible with adapting the latest technology Science (eLetter, 3 November 2018)

159. International official mechanism for discovering fraudulent studies is needed for protecting patients at risk Science (eLetter, 31 October 2018)

158. Science is based on replacing expired facts and evidences with new ones Science (eLetter, 27 October 2018)

157. Genetic distance plays a key role in selecting endangered species within limited budget Science (eLetter, 25 October 2018)

156. New NSF policy on limiting PIs to a single proposal per fiscal year makes sense Science (eLetter, 23 October 2018)

155. What makes your life worth living in AI age? Science (eLetter, 21 October 2018)

154. Optimum consumption of vitamins and minerals plays a key role in universal health Science (eLetter, 18 October 2018)

153. A Feedforward neural network is a subset of a recurrent neural network Science (eLetter, 13 October 2018)

152. Not publishers but authors should play a key role in the copyright infringement Science (eLetter, 13 October 2018)

151. Clumsiness must be examined in the medical entrance exam Science (eLetter, 11 October 2018)

150. A blockchain is fragile against the database approach Science (eLetter, 10 October 2018)

149. Moths spoofing against bats can be used as adversarial attacks against autonomous vehicles Science Advances (eLetter, 23 July 2018)

148. AI can find a better set of partners than those matching experts can choose Science Advances (eLetter, 28 September 2018)

147. Duality of research Science (eLetter, 4 October 2018)

146. An automaton is a Frankenstein metaphor Science (eLetter, 4 October 2018)

145. Who will be suffering from losing the Alzheimer’s gamble? Science (eLetter, 2 October 2018)

144. Public gambling, lottery, and alternate finance play a key role in solving financial crisis Science (eLetter, 29 September 2018)

143. Intelligence inferred by randomness Science (eLetter, 27 September 2018)

142. Intelligence in meta-analysis tools should be embedded for detecting publication bias and skewed data in order to avoid misleading conclusions Science (eLetter, 26 September 2018)

141. Radical curatives will play a key role in the universal health care Science (eLetter, 25 September 2018)

140. International standards are needed for securing autonomous vehicles Science (eLetter, 14 September 2018)

139. We can learn from the evolution in moths for securing autonomous vehicles Science (eLetter, 9 September 2018)

138. Current fire protection systems do not extinguish fire Science (eLetter, 8 September 2018)

137. Funders must understand the benefit of open access and open data sharing without killing publishers Science (eLetter, 8 September 2018)

136. Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS) plays a key role in negative emission technologies Science (eLetter, 7 September 2018)

135. Weather forecast prediction accuracy illustrates a performance indicator Science (eLetter, 4 September 2018)

134. The big data sharing will help advancing science and social science Science (eLetter, 2 September 2018)

133. NIH should focus on devising the better funding review strategy Science (eLetter, 1 September 2018)

132. Are we on the right track in medical research? Science (eLetter, 29 August 2018)

131. The probability of high tide should be considered in intensified coastal flooding hazard Science Advances (eLetter, 19 August 2018)

130. Adopt the latest flood-resistant and wildfires-resistant irrigation technology Science (eLetter, 26 August 2018)

129. African swine fever spreading in EU and detected in Korea Science (eLetter, 26 August 2018)

128. Today’s common sense can be changed tomorrow Science (eLetter, 24 August 2018)

127. TPM-like authenticity function is needed for securing AI products Science (eLetter, 24 August 2018)

126. Diversity and global optimization strategy should be executed in government administration Science (eLetter, 23 August 2018)

125. Dynamic guidance plays a key role in evaluating the safety of toxic chemicals Science (eLetter, 19 August 2018)

124. Fraudsters delay advancing science Science (eLetter, 17 August 2018)

123. AI has defeated a team of six human champions in quiz bowl questions Science (eLetter, 16 August 2018)

122. Funded evaluation criteria must be provided for building an evidence base Science (eLetter, 11 August 2018)

121. Weak infrared beam of light is enough for identifying cells Science (eLetter, 9 August 2018)

120. Alternative finance is a solution for supporting important researches Science (eLetter, 9 August 2018)

119. Climate models should be built by machine learning instead of man-made formulas Science (eLetter, 8 August 2018)

118. Who owns underground and aboveground in US and Japan Science (eLetter, 2 August 2018)

117. AI is not a magic method but statistical method Science (eLetter, 30 July 2018)

116. Fluoride to Prevent and Control Dental Caries Science (eLetter, 20 July 2018)

115. Data sharing repositories including Vivli should be easily accessible Science (eLetter, 21 July 2018)

114. Adversarial attacks are striking not only for AI (machine learning) but also for humans and a variety of sensors Science (eLetter, 20 July 2018)

113. Public gambling and lottery can increase local/national government budgets for science funding Science (eLetter, 18 July 2018)

112. Audience needs more “fun” than facts Science (eLetter, 17 July 2018)

111. Diversity plays a key role in solving challenging problems. Science (eLetter, 14 July 2018)

110. NIH and CDC should strive and seek for a new funding Science (eLetter, 7 July 2018)

109. Machine learning plays a key role in FDA drug approvals Science (eLetter, 6 July 2018)

108. The security problems of autonomous vehicles are solvable as long as the facts are disclosed Science (eLetter, 6 July 2018)

107. Do not confuse pseudorandom number and true physical random number Science (eLetter, 3 July 2018)

106. Infrasound and ultrasound recording is needed for scientific investigation Science (eLetter, 1 July 2018)

105. Deforestation problems can be only solved by strong politics Science (eLetter, 29 June 2018)

104. Ethical control in stem cell research is extremely hard Science (eLetter, 22 June 2018)

103. Cyberspace users must learn netiquette/online ethics Science (eLetter, 20 June 2018)

102. Aquaculture plays a key role in shifting fishery stocks Science (eLetter, 16 June 2018)

101. False charges can be created by mixture DNA samples Science (eLetter, 14 June 2018)

100. Weihai is one of special economic zones selected by Xi Jinping Science (eLetter, 12 June 2018)

99. Large and long-term funding tends to spoil humans including researchers Science (eLetter, 9 June 2018)

98. Based on Taoism, “wu wei” is the best policy for (graduate) education Science (eLetter, 4 June 2018)

97. Science literacy may be depending not on races but on annual income Science (eLetter, 2 June 2018)

96. “Gut instinct” of the standard penetration test (SPT) is predictable with machine learning Science (eLetter, 30 May 2018)

95. Age-discrimination is needed for government funding Science (eLetter, 30 May 2018)

94. Flourishing AI research and industry Science (eLetter, 29 May 2018)

93. Japan embraces coal power for backing global trends Science (eLetter, 18 May 2018)

92. Dental amalgam has been regarded as safe Science (eLetter, 12 May 2018)

91. Reproducibility problems of artificial intelligence inherently come from random numbers Science (eLetter, 10 May 2018)

90. The arms industry must be transformed into a different industry Science (eLetter, 10 May 2018)

89. EPA must fight against the ancient regime Science (eLetter, 10 May 2018)

88. App users are very selfish, but their privacy protections are needed Science (eLetter, 3 May 2018)

87. Frankenstein metaphor indicates our future? Science (eLetter, 28 April 2018)

86. The gap between the rich and the poor can be reduced not by funding researches but by strong polices Science (eLetter, 26 April 2018)

85. Terrorism must be considered for biosafety Science (eLetter, 21 April 2018)

84. The poorly paid postdoc problem is solvable Science (eLetter, 20 April 2018)

83. Bias effects in forensics can be scientifically alleviated by stochastic computing Science (eLetter, 20 April 2018)

82. A tool for automatically removing privacy from human subjects data should be developed Science (eLetter, 14 April 2018)

81. Deductive syllogism questions play a key role in PISA Science (eLetter, 12 April 2018)

80. Gun policy can be logically solved by reinforcement learning and/or automated deductive reasoning Science (eLetter, 29 March 2018)

79. Disclosing facts against sponsors/companies is hard to be published Science (eLetter, 29 March 2018)

78. BIM design should be based on Feng Shui Science (eLetter, 28 March 2018)

77. The performance of organic agriculture can be improved by controlling weeds with treading Science Advances (eLetter, 7 April 2017)

76. Man-made/natural heat is able to keep us cool Science (eLetter, 15 March 2018)

75. Science information is not permanent but tentative Science (eLetter, 14 March 2018)

74. Complex ecosystems understood by us maximize nature's resilience? Science (eLetter, 12 March 2018)

73. Based on Shannon's measure of information content, rare messages (lies) are more rapidly spread than non-rare messages (the truth) Science (eLetter, 12 March 2018)

72. Based on the butterfly effect, liquidating Zika virus, Ebola virus, yellow fever, and cholera is equivalent to biodiversity loss? Science (eLetter, 8 March 2018)

71. Disclosing the paper authorship rules plays a key role in the Contributor Roles Taxonomy (CRediT) system Science (eLetter, 3 March 2018)

70. Eating Collagen rejuvenates your skin? Science (eLetter, 27 Feb 2018)

69. Cyber risk scores play a key role in the census Science (eLetter, 22 Feb 2018)

68. Copyleft rules will be able to alleviate reproducibility crisis in AI Science (eLetter, 21 Feb 2018)

67. Advancing AI technology accelerates AI robots replacing human jobs Science (eLetter, 17 Feb 2018)

66. Patent problems and commercialization must be considered in open data sharing policy Science (eLetter, 13 Feb 2018)

65. Fake news and government censorship play a key role in the nuclear age Science (eLetter, 9 Feb 2018)

64. Sapiential city policy in China Science (eLetter, 5 Feb 2018)

63. The transparent policy plays a key role in the healthy institutions Science (eLetter, 5 Feb 2018)

62. In the long run, the gap between the rich and poor will dramatically increase by artificial intelligence Science (eLetter, 1 Feb 2018)

61. Balancing the duality (yin and yang) plays a key role in building a happy and healthy society Science (eLetter, 26 January 2018)

60. Reinforcement learning is better than human judges Science (eLetter, 22 January 2018)

59. Contributions of the Sun must be considered in nature's contributions to people Science (eLetter, 22 January 2018)

58. Determining the nature of Frankenstein is beyond our control Science (eLetter, 22 January 2018)

57. Drastic changes by the strong leadership in China for air pollution Science (eLetter, 22 January 2018)

56. Controlling harassers by ancient martial arts in Japan Science (eLetter, 12 January 2018)

55. Automatically building a formula by machine learning using big data for social science Science (eLetter, 11 January 2018)

54. FHSS (frequency hopping spread spectrum) is a great invention Science (eLetter, 26 December 2017)

53. What should we teach to children in machine learning age? Science (eLetter, 22 December 2017)

52. More Metamaterials, More Imaginations Science (eLetter, 20 December 2017)

51. Open source accelerates 3D fabrications and 3D printings Science (eLetter, 20 December 2017)

50. The current vehicles are in the Telnet's/HTTP's era: cryptography should be embedded in the autonomous vehicles Science (eLetter, 18 December 2017)

49. Autonomous vehicles must prepare for jamming and spoofing attacks Science (eLetter, 18 December 2017)

48. There are two types of sonic weapon using audible and inaudible sonic devices Science (eLetter, 14 December 2017)

47. Earthquake Early Warning (EEW) is limited: Bosai is crucial for saving our lives Science (eLetter, 14 December 2017)

46. Abstraction in Haiku plays a key role in Science Science (eLetter, 27 November 2017)

45. The current patent law makes us happy? Science (eLetter, 21 November 2017)

44. Raising society's moral standards play a key role for alleviating plastic waste problems Science (eLetter, 17 November 2017)

43. Special cares for lay public are needed for correcting scientific facts Science (eLetter, 17 November 2017)

42. Not "United Nations" but "United Industries" should be considered for global warming and Paris agreement Science (eLetter, 14 November 2017)

41. The slow innovation field with patent will become more profitable by using a rapid innovation with a new technology Science (eLetter, 7 November 2017)

40. The earth's best health may be different from the ideal ecosystem Science (eLetter, 6 November 2017)

39. Science is not robust but fragile Science (eLetter, 2 November 2017)

38. We should learn the past lessons Science (eLetter, 30 October 2017)

37. What should publishers do actions to researchers before they taking ResearchGate to court? Science (eLetter, 26 October 2017)

36. Brexit and EU science problem is like a "Whack-A-Mole" global-players game Science (eLetter, 23 October 2017)

35. Communication codes have been oscillating Science (eLetter, 12 October 2017)

34. Finland has several solutions for diversity initiatives problems Science (eLetter, 12 October 2017)

33. Tuna has efficient hydrodynamic multiple small fins for stability Science (eLetter, 7 October 2017)

32. Balanced heat flux (flow) is needed in thermoelectric power generation Science (eLetter, 6 October 2017)

31. Flat heat pipes can enhance electrocaloric cooling by improving heat dissipation to the air Science (eLetter, September 26 2017)

30. Machine learning should be used for improving weather forecast Science (eLetter, September 18 2017)

29. Japanese postdocs are getting older Science (eLetter, September 8 2017)

28. Adding random bias plays a key role for suppressing the effect of bias itself Science (eLetter, September 7 2017)

27. Openness is a key for successfully driving profit organizations Science (eLetter, August 28 2017)

26. Durability is a key for energy harvesting Science (eLetter, August 25 2017)

25. A conflict of interest plays a key role in shaping Wikipedia Science (eLetter, August 22 2017)

24. The role of government is changing Science (eLetter, August 22 2017)

23. There is no perfect review system, Science (eLetter, August 7 2017)

22. Automated reasoning, self-organization, and optimization should be added in AI Glossary, Science (eLetter, August 4 2017)

21. Open source software is indeed based on modularity and abstraction, Science (eLetter, July 24 2017)

20. Reproducibility is a key for real peer-reviewed evaluations, Science (eLetter, July 21 2017)

19. "GPU" and "open source software" play a key role for advancing deep learning, Science (eLetter, July 20 2017)

18. Embedded security is needed in BMI devices, Science (eLetter, July 20 2017)

17. Why shouldn't we combine satellite data with mobile data? Science (eLetter, July 14 2017)

16. Deja vu for U.S. and Japan nuclear waste, Science (eLetter, July 6 2017)

15. Weighted relative citation ratio means the research success?, Science (eLetter, June 29 2017)

14. J1, H-2B, L1, B1, E2, TN1, and E3 are all nonimmigrant visas for temporary working in the US, Science (eLetter, June 6 2017)

13. Infrasound monitoring is needed for investigating noise pollution, Science (eLetter, May 5 2017)

12. Confined unfrozen water plays a key role for water pipe repairs, Science Advances (eLetter, March 14 2017)

11. The large government funds should be shared with many researchers, Science (eLetter, April 20 2017)

10. Amateurism is the mother of invention, Science (eLetter, April 15 2017)

9. Problems of photovoltaics solar energy, Science (eLetter, April 14 2017)

8. Ensemble methods significantly improve prediction, Science (eLetter, April 12 2017)

7. Statistical syllogism and deductive syllogism in software packages, Science (eLetter, April 12 2017)

6. Inductive and deductive reasoning must be merged for enhancing prediction and breaking its limits, Science (eLetter, April 8 2017)

5. Ensemble methods can improve election prediction, Science (eLetter, April 7 2017)

4. Cooling power can be improved by overlaying metamaterials, Science (eLetter, March 31 2017)

3. Magma energy power plant, Science (eLetter, March 11 2017)

2. Black box is not safe at all, Science (eLetter, October 20 2016)

1. A near-optimum parallel planarization algorithm, (Sept. 15 1989) Science, pp.1221-1223

----------publications by Shino Iwami---------

ResearchGate



発電床プロジェクト報道の皆様へ

音力発電および速水君は JR東日本が実験してきている発電床プロジェクトとは、

一切関係していません。またその性能も保証できません。武藤佳恭研究室と

音力発電とは一切関係していません。2006年の我々の実験

(10歩で47uFのキャパシタが8V)では、発電量は0.15mW秒/歩です。

詳細

Motorcycle thermoelectric power generation

TBS radio

NHK World

Weather in Fujisawa

Fastest SOM algorithm in the world


Thermoelectric power generator


Shugiin internet TV

ultra-low cost internet gadget design (Ohmsha)

Circuit Cellar (open source)

Elekijack (open source)

Transistor-Gijutsu (open source)


Iwanami Junior book


Technology and Society(現代技術と社会) in Spring 2020


Takefuji lab. projects

RFID newspaper articles

Best small hotel in Nagasaki

E-kit projects

Products

Public Source

Lectures

Long-term Projects

Publications

Demo pages

E-Money

Security articles & comments



Prof. Yoshiyasu Takefuji
Email: takefuji(at mark)keio.jp 
y-take(at mark)musashino-u.ac.jp
Musashino University
Faculty of Data Science
3-3-3 Ariake, Koto-ku, Tokyo 1358181, JAPAN
Faculty of Data Science
phone:+81-3-5530-7300
fax: +81-3-5530-3811
Emeritus Professor of Keio University
Musashino University 
Case Western Reserve University