Mateen M. Rizki
Wright State University
53 Papers
240 Citations
Mateen M. Rizki is an academic researcher from Wright State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Pattern recognition (psychology) & Feature extraction. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 53 publications. Previous affiliations of Mateen M. Rizki include Miami University.
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Papers
Differential binding between volatile ligands and major urinary proteins due to genetic variation in mice
Jae Kwak,Claude C. Grigsby,Mateen M. Rizki,George Preti,George Preti,Mustafa Köksal,Jesusa Josue,Kunio Yamazaki,Gary K. Beauchamp +8 more
TL;DR: Comparing the release of VOCs in male urines of three different inbred strains before and after denaturation of urinary proteins suggests that binding interactions in ligands and MUPs differ between strains, adding yet another layer of complexity to chemical communication in mice.
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E-Net: Evolutionary neural network synthesis
TL;DR: E-Net is a new distributed evolutionary learning system that evolves neural-network-based pattern recognition systems (PRSs) with limited human interaction that orchestrates a multiplicity of evolutionary and classical learning techniques to synthesize feature detectors, select sets of cooperative features, and assemble classifiers.
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Changes in volatile compounds of mouse urine as it ages: their interactions with water and urinary proteins.
Jae Kwak,Claude C. Grigsby,George Preti,George Preti,Mateen M. Rizki,Kunio Yamazaki,Gary K. Beauchamp +6 more
TL;DR: Monitoring changes in volatile organic compounds released from male and female mouse urine following aging the urine samples demonstrated that some VOCs decreased slightly due to their binding with the major urinary proteins (MUPs) and identified MUP ligands whose headspace concentrations increased as the urine aged.
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The artificial worlds approach to emergent evolution
Michael Conrad,Mateen M. Rizki +1 more
TL;DR: The comparative properties of the EVOLVE family of artificial worlds models are described and the selection criteria (fitness values) are described, which emerge from the interactions of the organisms with each other and with the environment.
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Changes in volatile compounds of human urine as it ages: their interaction with water.
Jae Kwak,Jae Kwak,Claude C. Grigsby,Brittany R. Smith,Mateen M. Rizki,George Preti,George Preti +6 more
TL;DR: An overall decrease in concentration of many urinary VOCs was found, and it was concluded this was due to the urine evaporating as it aged, while some highly water-soluble compounds, such as short and branched-chain organic acids and trimethylamine, increased.
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