Highlights
“e-Learning crack-up” perception has a significant impact on student’s psychological distress.
Fear of academic year loss is the key responsible factor for psychological distress during COVID-19.
Prediction relevance of psychological distress pointed out a good fit with R
2
= 0.996 and Q
2
= 0.656.
Recently, the destructive impact of Coronavirus 2019, commonly known as COVID-19, has affected public health and human lives. This catastrophic effect disrupted human experience by introducing an exponentially more damaging unpredictable health crisis since the Second World War (Kursumovic et al. in Anaesthesia 75: 989-992, 2020). Strong communicable characteristics of COVID-19 within human communities make the world's crisis a severe pandemic. Due to the unavailable vaccine of COVID-19 to control rather than cure, early and accurate detection of the virus can be a promising technique for tracking and preventing the infection from spreading (e.g., by isolating the patients). This situation indicates improving the auxiliary COVID-19 detection technique. Computed tomography (CT) imaging is a widely used technique for pneumonia because of its expected availability. The artificial intelligence-aided images analysis might be a promising alternative for identifying COVID-19. This paper presents a promising technique of predicting COVID-19 patients from the CT image using convolutional neural networks (CNN). The novel approach is based on the most recent modified CNN architecture (DenseNet-121) to predict COVID-19. The results outperformed 92% accuracy, with a 95% recall showing acceptable performance for the prediction of COVID-19.
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