Sign In
Submit
Home
Journals
Articles
Books
Resources
Top Search Keyword: COVID 19
Top Search Keyword: Environment
Top Search Keyword: Economics
Showing
279
results
for
Analysis
.
Filter options
Publication Date
From
to
Subjects
Computer Science & Communications (27)
Business & Economics (13)
Medicine & Healthcare (71)
Engineering & Technology (15)
Chemistry & Materials Science (5)
Education & Social Sciences (69)
Agriculture & Food Sciences (15)
Earth & Environmental Sciences (19)
Biomedical & Life Sciences (12)
Arts & Literature Linguistics (1)
Arts & Literature Linguistics (17)
Physics and Chemistry & Materials Science (1)
Mathematics (7)
Journal of Mathematics Letters (3)
Universal Journal of Multidisciplinary Research (1)
Journal of Cellular Neuroscience (3)
Journals
Journal of Artificial Intelligence and Big Data (22)
Universal Journal of Business and Management (6)
Current Research in Public Health (10)
Online Journal of Engineering Sciences (6)
Universal Journal of Finance and Economics (6)
Global Journal of Medical Case Reports (1)
Online Journal of Chemistry (6)
Open Journal of Psychology (7)
Universal Journal of Business and Management (1)
Open Journal of Agricultural Research (7)
Universal Journal of Sport Sciences (5)
World Journal of Geomatics and Geosciences (8)
Online Journal of Mechanical Engineering (1)
World Journal of Electrical and Electronic Engineering (3)
Global Journal of Epidemiology and Infectious Disease (13)
Universal Journal of Social Sciences and Humanities (22)
World Journal of Nursing Research (9)
Open Journal of Educational Research (27)
Journal of Biomedical and Life Sciences (8)
Universal Journal of Literature and Linguistics (13)
Research Journal of Ecology and Environmental Sciences (11)
Universal Journal of Physics Research (1)
Journal of Art and Design (6)
Open Journal of Food and Nutrition (2)
World Journal of Civil Engineering and Architecture (5)
Online Journal of Microbiological Research (4)
Universal Journal of Food Security (2)
International Journal of Mathematical, Engineering, Biological and Applied Computing (7)
Universal Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology (3)
World Journal of Cancer and Oncology Research (6)
World Journal of Clinical Medicine Research (7)
Universal Journal of Food Science and Technology (4)
Universal Journal of Computer Sciences and Communications (5)
Global Journal of Cardiovascular Diseases (5)
J. of Social Mathematical & Human Engineering Sciences (7)
Universal Journal of Pharmacy and Pharmacology (4)
World Journal of Medical Microbiology (1)
Universal Journal of Gastroenterology and Hepatology (3)
Journal of Mathematics Letters (3)
Open Journal of Neuroscience (5)
Universal Journal of Multidisciplinary Research (1)
Journal of Cellular Neuroscience (3)
Open Journal of Medical Sciences (2)
Global Journal of Orthopedics (1)
Article Types
Review Article (49)
Article (210)
Case Report (1)
Editorial Article (1)
Systematic Review (3)
Case Study (1)
Mini Review (1)
Protocol (1)
Communication (2)
Commentary (2)
Brief Review (1)
Meta-Analysis (3)
Perspective (1)
Original Article (1)
Brief Report (2)
Countries / Territories
USA (84)
India (11)
Iran (11)
Indonesia (4)
Nigeria (22)
Australia (4)
Greece (5)
Algeria (1)
Japan (3)
Oman (1)
Cameroon (6)
South Africa (2)
Democratic Republic of the Congo (4)
China (13)
Ghana (55)
UAE (1)
Gambia (3)
Brazil (2)
Spain (2)
Portugal (3)
Vietnam (1)
Turkey (2)
Canada (3)
Italy (3)
Cuba (3)
Congo (1)
Ethiopia (4)
Ukraine (2)
Lebanon (1)
Czech Republic (1)
UK (3)
Egypt (3)
Mozambique (1)
Mexico (1)
Philippines (6)
Sri Lanka (1)
Uzbekistan (1)
Bangladesh (2)
Kenya (1)
Burkina Faso (1)
Tunisia (1)
First
Prev
1
2
3
4
5
...
Next
Last
Open Access
February 06, 2026
Predictive Modeling of Public Sentiment Using Social Media Data and Natural Language Processing Techniques
Lawrence A. Farinola
,
Jean-Eudes Assogba
Journal of Artificial Intelligence and Big Data
2026
,
6(1),
1-12.
DOI:
10.31586/jaibd.2026.6162
Views
1
Downloads
0
Abstract
Social media platforms like X (formerly Twitter) generate vast volumes of user-generated content that provide real-time insights into public sentiment. Despite the widespread use of traditional machine learning methods, their limitations in capturing contextual nuances in noisy social media text remain a challenge. This study leverages the Sentiment140 dataset, comprising 1.6 million labeled
[...] Read more.
Social media platforms like X (formerly Twitter) generate vast volumes of user-generated content that provide real-time insights into public sentiment. Despite the widespread use of traditional machine learning methods, their limitations in capturing contextual nuances in noisy social media text remain a challenge. This study leverages the Sentiment140 dataset, comprising 1.6 million labeled tweets, and develops predictive models for binary sentiment classification using Naive Bayes, Logistic Regression, and the transformer-based BERT model. Experiments were conducted on a balanced subset of 12,000 tweets after comprehensive NLP preprocessing. Evaluation using accuracy, F1-score, and confusion matrices revealed that BERT significantly outperforms traditional models, achieving an accuracy of 89.5% and an F1-score of 0.89 by effectively modeling contextual and semantic nuances. In contrast, Naive Bayes and Logistic Regression demonstrated reasonable but consistently lower performance. To support practical deployment, we introduce SentiFeel, an interactive tool enabling real-time sentiment analysis. While resource constraints limited the dataset size and training epochs, future work will explore full corpus utilization and the inclusion of neutral sentiment classes. These findings underscore the potential of transformer models for enhanced public opinion monitoring, marketing analytics, and policy forecasting.
Figures
Figure 1
Figure 2
Figure 3
Figure 4
Figure 5
Figure 6
Figure 7
Previous
Next
PDF
Html
Xml
Article
Open Access
June 26, 2025
The Relationship Between Lymphocyte Count and Mortality in Patients with Dysphagia
Min Wei
,
Chengming Ke
,
Sumin Wu
World Journal of Clinical Medicine Research
2025
,
5(1),
40-51.
DOI:
10.31586/wjcmr.2025.6128
Views
389
Downloads
50
Abstract
Background:
Dysphagia is a common functional impairment in elderly populations, often leading to severe complications such as malnutrition and aspiration pneumonia, significantly increasing healthcare burdens. Currently, effective prognostic assessment tools are lacking. The absolute lymphocyte count (ALC), a biomarker reflecting immune-nutritional status, has potential predictive value in this context, though its role in dysphagia prognosis remains unclear.
Methods:
This retrospective cohort study included 253 dysphagic patients who received percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy (PEG) or total parenteral nutrition (TPN) between 2014 and 2017. Five patients with missing ALC were excluded. Cox regression models assessed the association between ALC and mortality. ALC was analyzed as both continuous variable (using restriocted cubic splines) and categorical tertiles, with additional threshold analyses to assess non-linearity. Kaplan–Meier survival curves and subgroup analyses were also performed.
Results:
Lower ALC was associated with poorer nutritional status, higher inflammatory markers, and greater comorbidity burden. Higher ALC was independently associated with reduced mortality (adjusted HR: 0.60; 95% CI: 0.44–0.83;
p
= 0.002). Patients in the highest tertile had significantly better survival than those in the lowest (HR: 0.37; 95% CI: 0.23–0.59;
P
< 0.001). A non-linear threshold effect was identified at ALC = 1.899×10
9
/L (
p
for non-linearity = 0.009). Kaplan–Meier analysis confirmed improved survival with higher ALC (
p
[...] Read more.
Background:
Dysphagia is a common functional impairment in elderly populations, often leading to severe complications such as malnutrition and aspiration pneumonia, significantly increasing healthcare burdens. Currently, effective prognostic assessment tools are lacking. The absolute lymphocyte count (ALC), a biomarker reflecting immune-nutritional status, has potential predictive value in this context, though its role in dysphagia prognosis remains unclear.
Methods:
This retrospective cohort study included 253 dysphagic patients who received percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy (PEG) or total parenteral nutrition (TPN) between 2014 and 2017. Five patients with missing ALC were excluded. Cox regression models assessed the association between ALC and mortality. ALC was analyzed as both continuous variable (using restriocted cubic splines) and categorical tertiles, with additional threshold analyses to assess non-linearity. Kaplan–Meier survival curves and subgroup analyses were also performed.
Results:
Lower ALC was associated with poorer nutritional status, higher inflammatory markers, and greater comorbidity burden. Higher ALC was independently associated with reduced mortality (adjusted HR: 0.60; 95% CI: 0.44–0.83;
p
= 0.002). Patients in the highest tertile had significantly better survival than those in the lowest (HR: 0.37; 95% CI: 0.23–0.59;
P
< 0.001). A non-linear threshold effect was identified at ALC = 1.899×10
9
/L (
p
for non-linearity = 0.009). Kaplan–Meier analysis confirmed improved survival with higher ALC (
p
< 0.0001). Subgroup analyses showed the protective effect of higher ALC was consistent across age, sex, BMI, PEG use, and comorbidity strata, with no significant interactions.
Conclusions:
ALC is an independent, non-linear predictor of mortality in older dysphagic patients and may aid clinical risk stratification across diverse patient subgroups.
Figures
Figure 1
Figure 2
Figure 3
Figure 4
Previous
Next
PDF
Html
Xml
Article
Open Access
June 26, 2025
Mathematical modelling of the impact of HIV prevention strategies among female sex workers on public health in Burkina Faso
Serge M. A. SOMDA
,
Bernard E. A. DABONÉ
,
Boureima SANGARÉ
,
Sado TRAORÉ
Journal of Mathematics Letters
2025
,
3(1),
22-40.
DOI:
10.31586/jml.2025.6104
Views
384
Downloads
33
Abstract
This article presents a mathematical model designed to simulate the impact of targeted interventions aimed at preventing HIV transmission among female sex workers (FSWs) and their clients, while also analyzing their effects on the health of the general population. The compartmental model distinguishes between high-risk populations (FSWs and their clients) and low-risk populations (sexually active
[...] Read more.
This article presents a mathematical model designed to simulate the impact of targeted interventions aimed at preventing HIV transmission among female sex workers (FSWs) and their clients, while also analyzing their effects on the health of the general population. The compartmental model distinguishes between high-risk populations (FSWs and their clients) and low-risk populations (sexually active men and women in the general population), and links prevention efforts in high-risk groups to the evolution of the epidemic in the low-risk population. The fundamental properties of the model, such as the positivity of solutions and the boundedness of the system, have been verified, and the basic reproduction number R
0
has been calculated. Finally, the stability of the model was studied using Varga’s theorem and the Lyapunov method. Simulation results show that targeted prevention among FSWs and their clients reduces HIV incidence in the general population. This framework provides a valuable tool for guiding policymakers in the design of effective strategies to combat the epidemic, especially relevant in the context of suspension of USAID funding.
Figures
Figure 1
Figure 2
Figure 3
Figure 4
Previous
Next
PDF
Html
Xml
Article
Open Access
June 06, 2025
Food security, dietary diversity, and age as determinants of nutritional status among adolescent girls in coastal Bangladesh
Tanzina Akter
,
Taslima Akter
,
Sharmin Shilpy Nokshi
,
Sujit Kumar Banik
,
Abu Ansar Md Rizwan
Journal of Biomedical and Life Sciences
2025
,
5(2),
110-121.
DOI:
10.31586/jbls.2025.6112
Views
561
Downloads
85
Abstract
Background:
Adolescent girls living in disaster-prone coastal regions of Bangladesh face heightened nutritional vulnerability due to limited food access, poor dietary diversity, and environmental stressors. Despite growing concerns about adolescent malnutrition, few studies have examined the combined influence of food security, dietary diversity, and age on nutritional outcomes in these
[...] Read more.
Background:
Adolescent girls living in disaster-prone coastal regions of Bangladesh face heightened nutritional vulnerability due to limited food access, poor dietary diversity, and environmental stressors. Despite growing concerns about adolescent malnutrition, few studies have examined the combined influence of food security, dietary diversity, and age on nutritional outcomes in these settings.
Objectives:
This study aimed to assess the association between dietary diversity, food security, and age with the nutritional status of adolescent girls in coastal Bangladesh.
Methods:
A cross-sectional survey was conducted among 345 adolescent girls aged 10–19 in Chattogram and Cox’s Bazar. Data on dietary intake were collected using a 24-hour dietary recall and a food frequency questionnaire. Household food security was assessed using a validated scale. Nutritional status was determined using BMI-for-age classifications. Bivariate and multivariate analyses explored associations between dietary diversity, food security, age, and nutritional status.
Results:
Among participants, 10.14% were underweight, and 29.85% were either overweight or obese. While 17.39% demonstrated high dietary diversity (≥7 food groups), the majority had moderate diversity (5 or 6 food groups) (59.42%). Food-insecure households were significantly more likely to have overweight or obese adolescents (p < 0.05). Although dietary diversity was associated with BMI in bivariate analysis, it was not a significant predictor in the multivariate model. Age showed a significant relationship with both dietary diversity and nutritional status.
Conclusion:
The findings emphasize the importance of addressing household food security and age-related nutritional vulnerabilities in coastal areas. Interventions should prioritize age-sensitive, culturally appropriate strategies to improve dietary quality and prevent the double burden of malnutrition among adolescent girls.
Figures
Figure 1
Previous
Next
PDF
Html
Xml
Article
First
Prev
1
2
3
4
5
...
Next
Last
Query parameters
Keyword:
Analysis
View options
Order results
Relevance
Published date, newest
Published date, oldest
Most viewed
Most cited
Result details
Normal
Extended
Compact
Results per page
10
20
50
100
200
Add a Citation for
Article Title
Authors
Article Link/URL
Year
Abstract
0/6000
Citations of
Views of
Downloads of