70 research outputs found

    Learning Credible Models

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    In many settings, it is important that a model be capable of providing reasons for its predictions (i.e., the model must be interpretable). However, the model's reasoning may not conform with well-established knowledge. In such cases, while interpretable, the model lacks \textit{credibility}. In this work, we formally define credibility in the linear setting and focus on techniques for learning models that are both accurate and credible. In particular, we propose a regularization penalty, expert yielded estimates (EYE), that incorporates expert knowledge about well-known relationships among covariates and the outcome of interest. We give both theoretical and empirical results comparing our proposed method to several other regularization techniques. Across a range of settings, experiments on both synthetic and real data show that models learned using the EYE penalty are significantly more credible than those learned using other penalties. Applied to a large-scale patient risk stratification task, our proposed technique results in a model whose top features overlap significantly with known clinical risk factors, while still achieving good predictive performance

    Adaptive motion artefact reduction in respiration and ECG signals for wearable healthcare monitoring systems

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    Wearable healthcare monitoring systems (WHMSs) have received significant interest from both academia and industry with the advantage of non-intrusive and ambulatory monitoring. The aim of this paper is to investigate the use of an adaptive filter to reduce motion artefact (MA) in physiological signals acquired by WHMSs. In our study, a WHMS is used to acquire ECG, respiration and triaxial accelerometer (ACC) signals during incremental treadmill and cycle ergometry exercises. With these signals, performances of adaptive MA cancellation are evaluated in both respiration and ECG signals. To achieve effective and robust MA cancellation, three axial outputs of the ACC are employed to estimate the MA by a bank of gradient adaptive Laguerre lattice (GALL) filter, and the outputs of the GALL filters are further combined with time-varying weights determined by a Kalman filter. The results show that for the respiratory signals, MA component can be reduced and signal quality can be improved effectively (the power ratio between the MA-corrupted respiratory signal and the adaptive filtered signal was 1.31 in running condition, and the corresponding signal quality was improved from 0.77 to 0.96). Combination of the GALL and Kalman filters can achieve robust MA cancellation without supervised selection of the reference axis from the ACC. For ECG, the MA component can also be reduced by adaptive filtering. The signal quality, however, could not be improved substantially just by the adaptive filter with the ACC outputs as the reference signals.Municipal Science & Technology Commission. Beijing Natural Science Foundation (Grants 3102028 and 3122034)General Logistics Science Foundation (Grant CWS11C108)National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (National Institute of General Medical Sciences (U.S.). Grant R01- EB001659)National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (National Institute for Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering (U.S.) Cooperative Agreement U01- EB-008577

    Transfer Entropy Estimation and Directional Coupling Change Detection in Biomedical Time Series

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    Background: The detection of change in magnitude of directional coupling between two non-linear time series is a common subject of interest in the biomedical domain, including studies involving the respiratory chemoreflex system. Although transfer entropy is a useful tool in this avenue, no study to date has investigated how different transfer entropy estimation methods perform in typical biomedical applications featuring small sample size and presence of outliers. Methods: With respect to detection of increased coupling strength, we compared three transfer entropy estimation techniques using both simulated time series and respiratory recordings from lambs. The following estimation methods were analyzed: fixed-binning with ranking, kernel density estimation (KDE), and the Darbellay-Vajda (D-V) adaptive partitioning algorithm extended to three dimensions. In the simulated experiment, sample size was varied from 50 to 200, while coupling strength was increased. In order to introduce outliers, the heavy-tailed Laplace distribution was utilized. In the lamb experiment, the objective was to detect increased respiratoryrelated chemosensitivity to O[subscript 2] and CO[subscript 2] induced by a drug, domperidone. Specifically, the separate influence of end-tidal PO[subscript 2] and PCO[subscript 2] on minute ventilation ([dot over V][subscript E]) before and after administration of domperidone was analyzed. Results: In the simulation, KDE detected increased coupling strength at the lowest SNR among the three methods. In the lamb experiment, D-V partitioning resulted in the statistically strongest increase in transfer entropy post-domperidone for PO2 → [dot over V][subscript E]. In addition, D-V partitioning was the only method that could detect an increase in transfer entropy for PCO[subscript 2] → [dot over V][subscript E], in agreement with experimental findings. Conclusions: Transfer entropy is capable of detecting directional coupling changes in non-linear biomedical time series analysis featuring a small number of observations and presence of outliers. The results of this study suggest that fixed-binning, even with ranking, is too primitive, and although there is no clear winner between KDE and D-V partitioning, the reader should note that KDE requires more computational time and extensive parameter selection than D-V partitioning. We hope this study provides a guideline for selection of an appropriate transfer entropy estimation method.National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (Grant R01-EB001659)National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (Grant R01- HL73146)National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (Grant HL085188-01A2)National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (Grant HL090897-01A2)National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (Grant K24 HL093218-01A1)National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (Cooperative Agreement U01-EB-008577)National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (Training Grant T32-HL07901))American Heart Association (Grant 0840159N

    Predicting In-Hospital Mortality of ICU Patients: The PhysioNet/Computing in Cardiology Challenge 2012

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    Acuity scores, such as APACHE, SAPS, MPM, and SOFA, are widely used to account for population differ ences in studies aiming to compare how medications, care guidelines, surgery, and other interventions impact mortality in Intensive Care Unit (ICU) patients. By contrast, the focus of the PhysioNet/CinC Challenge 2012 is to develop methods for patient-specific prediction of in-hospital mortality. The data used for the challenge consisted of 5 general descriptors and 36 time series (measurements of vital signs and laboratory results) from the first 48 hours of the first available ICU stay of 12,000 adult patients from the MIMIC II database. The challenge was organized as two events: event 1 measured performance of a binary classifier, and event 2 measured performance of a risk estimator. The score of event 1 was the lower of sensitivity and positive predictive value. The score for event 2 was a range-normalized Hosmer-Lemeshow statistic. A baseline algorithm (using SAPS-1) obtained event 1 and 2 scores of 0.3125 and 68.58 respectively. Most participants submitted entries that outperformed the baseline algorithm. The top final scores for events 1 and 2 were 0.5353 and 17.88 respectively.National Institute for Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering (U.S.)National Institute of General Medical Sciences (U.S.) (NIH cooperative agreement U01-EB-008577)National Institute of General Medical Sciences (U.S.) (NIH grant R01-EB-001659

    Quality estimation of the electrocardiogram using cross-correlation among leads

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    Background Fast and accurate quality estimation of the electrocardiogram (ECG) signal is a relevant research topic that has attracted considerable interest in the scientific community, particularly due to its impact on tele-medicine monitoring systems, where the ECG is collected by untrained technicians. In recent years, a number of studies have addressed this topic, showing poor performance in discriminating between clinically acceptable and unacceptable ECG records. Methods This paper presents a novel, simple and accurate algorithm to estimate the quality of the 12-lead ECG by exploiting the structure of the cross-covariance matrix among different leads. Ideally, ECG signals from different leads should be highly correlated since they capture the same electrical activation process of the heart. However, in the presence of noise or artifacts the covariance among these signals will be affected. Eigenvalues of the ECG signals covariance matrix are fed into three different supervised binary classifiers. Results and conclusion The performance of these classifiers were evaluated using PhysioNet/CinC Challenge 2011 data. Our best quality classifier achieved an accuracy of 0.898 in the test set, while having a complexity well below the results of contestants who participated in the Challenge, thus making it suitable for implementation in current cellular devices.National Institute of General Medical Sciences (U.S.) (Grant R01GM104987)Spain (Research Grant TEC2013-46067-R)Spain (Research Grant TEC2013-48439-C4-1-R)Spain (Research Grant TEC2010-19263

    Recent advances in heart sound analysis

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    "This is an author-created, un-copyedited versíon of an article published in Physiological Measurement. IOP Publishing Ltd is not responsíble for any errors or omissíons in this versíon of the manuscript or any versíon derived from it. The Versíon of Record is available online at https://doi.org/10.1088/1361-6579/aa7ec8".[EN] Objective: Auscultation of heart sound recordings or the phonocardiogram (PCG) has been shown to be valuable for the detection of disease and pathologies (Leatham 1975, Raghu et al 2015). The automated classification of pathology in heart sounds has been studied for over 50 years. Typical methods can be grouped into: artificial neural network-based approaches (Uguz 2012), support vector machines (Ari et al 2010), hidden Markov model-based approaches (Saracoglu 2012) and clustering-based approaches (Quiceno-Manrique et al 2010). However, accurate automated classification still remains a significant challenge due to the lack of highquality, rigorously validated, and standardized open databases of heart sound recordings. Approach: The 2016 PhysioNet/Computing in Cardiology (CinC) Challenge sought to create a large database to facilitate this, by assembling recordings from multiple research groups across the world, acquired in different real-world clinical and nonclinical environments (such as in-home visits), to encourage the development of algorithms to accurately identify, from a single short recording (10-60s), as normal, abnormal or poor signal quality, and thus to further identify whether the subject of the recording should be referred on for an expert diagnosis (Liu et al 2016). Until this Challenge, no significant open-access heart sound database was available for researchers to train and evaluate the automated diagnostics algorithms upon (Clifford et al 2016). Moreover, no open source heart sound segmentation and classification algorithms were available. The Challenge changed this situation significantly. Main results and Significance: This editorial reviews the follow-up research generated as a result of the Challenge, published in the concurrent special issue of Physiological Measurement. Additionally we make some recommendations for promising research avenues in the field of heart sound signal processing and classification as a result of the Challenge.This work was funded in part by the National Institutes of Health, grant R01-GM104987, the International Postdoctoral Exchange Programme of the National Postdoctoral Management Committee of China and Emory University. We are also grateful to Mathworks for providing free software licenses and sponsoring the Challenge prize money, and Computing in Cardiology for sponsoring the Challenge prize money and providing a forum to present the Challenge results. We would also like to thank the database contributors, and data annotators for their invaluable assistance. Finally, we would like to thank all the competitors and researchers themselves, without whom there would be no Challenge or special issue.Clifford, GD.; Liu, C.; Moody, B.; Millet Roig, J.; Schmidt, S.; Li, Q.; Silva, I.... (2017). Recent advances in heart sound analysis. Physiological Measurement. 38(8):10-25. https://doi.org/10.1088/1361-6579/aa7ec8S1025388Abdollahpur, M., Ghaffari, A., Ghiasi, S., & Mollakazemi, M. J. (2017). Detection of pathological heart sounds. Physiological Measurement, 38(8), 1616-1630. doi:10.1088/1361-6579/aa7840Ari, S., Hembram, K., & Saha, G. (2010). Detection of cardiac abnormality from PCG signal using LMS based least square SVM classifier. Expert Systems with Applications, 37(12), 8019-8026. doi:10.1016/j.eswa.2010.05.088Chauhan, S., Wang, P., Sing Lim, C., & Anantharaman, V. (2008). A computer-aided MFCC-based HMM system for automatic auscultation. Computers in Biology and Medicine, 38(2), 221-233. doi:10.1016/j.compbiomed.2007.10.006Nabhan Homsi, M., & Warrick, P. (2017). Ensemble methods with outliers for phonocardiogram classification. Physiological Measurement, 38(8), 1631-1644. doi:10.1088/1361-6579/aa7982Kay, E., & Agarwal, A. (2017). DropConnected neural networks trained on time-frequency and inter-beat features for classifying heart sounds. Physiological Measurement, 38(8), 1645-1657. doi:10.1088/1361-6579/aa6a3dLangley, P., & Murray, A. (2017). Heart sound classification from unsegmented phonocardiograms. Physiological Measurement, 38(8), 1658-1670. doi:10.1088/1361-6579/aa724cLiu, C., Springer, D., Li, Q., Moody, B., Juan, R. A., Chorro, F. J., … Clifford, G. D. (2016). An open access database for the evaluation of heart sound algorithms. Physiological Measurement, 37(12), 2181-2213. doi:10.1088/0967-3334/37/12/2181Maknickas, V., & Maknickas, A. (2017). Recognition of normal–abnormal phonocardiographic signals using deep convolutional neural networks and mel-frequency spectral coefficients. Physiological Measurement, 38(8), 1671-1684. doi:10.1088/1361-6579/aa7841Plesinger, F., Viscor, I., Halamek, J., Jurco, J., & Jurak, P. (2017). Heart sounds analysis using probability assessment. Physiological Measurement, 38(8), 1685-1700. doi:10.1088/1361-6579/aa7620Da Poian, G., Liu, C., Bernardini, R., Rinaldo, R., & Clifford, G. D. (2017). Atrial fibrillation detection on compressed sensed ECG. Physiological Measurement, 38(7), 1405-1425. doi:10.1088/1361-6579/aa7652Quiceno-Manrique, A. F., Godino-Llorente, J. I., Blanco-Velasco, M., & Castellanos-Dominguez, G. (2009). Selection of Dynamic Features Based on Time–Frequency Representations for Heart Murmur Detection from Phonocardiographic Signals. Annals of Biomedical Engineering, 38(1), 118-137. doi:10.1007/s10439-009-9838-3Jull, J., Giles, A., Boyer, Y., & Stacey, D. (2015). Cultural adaptation of a shared decision making tool with Aboriginal women: a qualitative study. BMC Medical Informatics and Decision Making, 15(1). doi:10.1186/s12911-015-0129-7Saraçoğlu, R. (2012). Hidden Markov model-based classification of heart valve disease with PCA for dimension reduction. Engineering Applications of Artificial Intelligence, 25(7), 1523-1528. doi:10.1016/j.engappai.2012.07.005Schmidt, S. E., Holst-Hansen, C., Graff, C., Toft, E., & Struijk, J. J. (2010). Segmentation of heart sound recordings by a duration-dependent hidden Markov model. Physiological Measurement, 31(4), 513-529. doi:10.1088/0967-3334/31/4/004Springer, D. B., Brennan, T., Ntusi, N., Abdelrahman, H. Y., Zühlke, L. J., Mayosi, B. M., … Clifford, G. D. (2016). Automated signal quality assessment of mobile phone-recorded heart sound signals. Journal of Medical Engineering & Technology, 40(7-8), 342-355. doi:10.1080/03091902.2016.1213902Springer, D., Tarassenko, L., & Clifford, G. (2015). Logistic Regression-HSMM-based Heart Sound Segmentation. IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering, 1-1. doi:10.1109/tbme.2015.2475278Uğuz, H. (2010). A Biomedical System Based on Artificial Neural Network and Principal Component Analysis for Diagnosis of the Heart Valve Diseases. Journal of Medical Systems, 36(1), 61-72. doi:10.1007/s10916-010-9446-7Whitaker, B. M., Suresha, P. B., Liu, C., Clifford, G. D., & Anderson, D. V. (2017). Combining sparse coding and time-domain features for heart sound classification. Physiological Measurement, 38(8), 1701-1713. doi:10.1088/1361-6579/aa7623Zhu, T., Dunkley, N., Behar, J., Clifton, D. A., & Clifford, G. D. (2015). Fusing Continuous-Valued Medical Labels Using a Bayesian Model. Annals of Biomedical Engineering, 43(12), 2892-2902. doi:10.1007/s10439-015-1344-1Zhu, T., Johnson, A. E. W., Behar, J., & Clifford, G. D. (2013). Crowd-Sourced Annotation of ECG Signals Using Contextual Information. Annals of Biomedical Engineering, 42(4), 871-884. doi:10.1007/s10439-013-0964-

    False alarm reduction in critical care

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    High false alarm rates in the ICU decrease quality of care by slowing staff response times while increasing patient delirium through noise pollution. The 2015 PhysioNet/Computing in Cardiology Challenge provides a set of 1250 multi-parameter ICU data segments associated with critical arrhythmia alarms, and challenges the general research community to address the issue of false alarm suppression using all available signals. Each data segment was 5 minutes long (for real time analysis), ending at the time of the alarm. For retrospective analysis, we provided a further 30 seconds of data after the alarm was triggered. A total of 750 data segments were made available for training and 500 were held back for testing. Each alarm was reviewed by expert annotators, at least two of whom agreed that the alarm was either true or false. Challenge participants were invited to submit a complete, working algorithm to distinguish true from false alarms, and received a score based on their program's performance on the hidden test set. This score was based on the percentage of alarms correct, but with a penalty that weights the suppression of true alarms five times more heavily than acceptance of false alarms. We provided three example entries based on well-known, open source signal processing algorithms, to serve as a basis for comparison and as a starting point for participants to develop their own code. A total of 38 teams submitted a total of 215 entries in this year's Challenge. This editorial reviews the background issues for this challenge, the design of the challenge itself, the key achievements, and the follow-up research generated as a result of the Challenge, published in the concurrent special issue of Physiological Measurement. Additionally we make some recommendations for future changes in the field of patient monitoring as a result of the Challenge.National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (Grant R01-GM104987)National Institute of General Medical Sciences (U.S.) (Grant U01-EB-008577)National Institutes of Health (U.S.) (Grant R01-EB-001659

    Ansiedade e Depressão na Morbidade Materna Grave e Near Miss

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    To verify the prevalence of anxiety and depression in women with severe maternal morbidity (near miss), a cross-sectional cohort study was conducted, with 549 women. The Beck Depression Inventory (BDI) and the Anxiety Inventory (BAI) were used. For the statistical analysis, the Pearson chi-square test and the U-Mann-Whitney test besides Odds Ratio and their 95% confidence intervals. There was a higher prevalence and a greater chance of developing anxiety and depression in the SAMM/NM, as well as the positive and significant relationship between both. We consider association from the psychological point of view as a serious and shocking factor in the mental health of women.Com o objetivo de verificar a prevalência da ansiedade e depressão em mulheres com morbidade materna grave (near miss), foi realizado estudo de coorte transversal, com 549 mulheres. Para tanto, foram utilizados o Inventário de Beck de Depressão (BDI) e o Inventário de Ansiedade (BAI). Na análise estatística, aplicaram-se o teste do qui-quadrado de Pearson e o U-Mann-Whitney, além de Razões de Chances brutas e seus Intervalos com 95% de confiança. Houve maior prevalência e maior chance de desenvolver a ansiedade e depressão na MMG/NM, bem como a relação positiva e significativa entre ambos. Considera-se a associação do ponto de vista psicológico, como um fator grave e impactante na saúde mental da mulher

    Aspectos Morfofuncionais e Laboratoriais de Cryptococcus sp. Evidenciados na Criptococose

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    INTRODUÇÃO: A criptococose é uma patologia sistêmica decorrente da ação de leveduras do gênero Cryptococcus sp., em particular, as espécies C. neoformans e C. gattii. A doença acomete inicialmente os pulmões, todavia, os fungos apresentam forte tropismo para o tecido cerebral ocasionando a meningite criptocócica. Fatores como a atividade da cápsula proteica e as enzimas sintetizadas pelo fungo corroboram para a instauração da doença e, além disso, são parâmetros utilizados em testes laboratoriais para a detecção dos patógenos em amostras biológicas. OBJETIVO: Descrever os fatores comumente associados ao desenvolvimento da meningite criptocócica e os testes laboratoriais utilizados na detecção dos patógenos. METODOLOGIA: Este é um estudo exploratório, mediado por pesquisa bibliográfica, com trabalhos produzidos entre os anos 2000 e 2016, com ênfase na descrição dos aspectos funcionais, epidemiológicos e laboratoriais da doença. RESULTADOS E DISCUSSÃO: A criptococose é fortemente influenciada pela ação da cápsula proteica e enzimas como a fosfolipase e urease. O procedimento laboratorial mais utilizado é a pesquisa do fungo em ágar Sabouraud, visto que o meio canavanina-glicina-azul de bromotimol (CGB) pode ser executado em segundo plano. CONCLUSÃO: O estudo dos fatores que reforçam a patogenicidade da meningite fúngica pode auxiliar na elaboração de futuras medidas terapêuticas direcionadas para o controle das taxas de mortalidade humana.   Palavras-chave: Cryptococcus neoformans. Meningite. Meningite criptocócica. ABSTRACT INTRODUCTION: Cryptococcosis is a systemic disorder resulting from the Cryptococcus sp. action, in particular, the species C. neoformans and C. gattii. The disease initially affects the lungs, however, fungi have strong tropism for the brain tissue causing cryptococcal meningitis. Factors such as the activity of the protein capsule and enzymes synthesized by the fungus to confirm the establishment of the disease and, furthermore, are parameters used in laboratory tests for detecting pathogens in biological samples. OBJECTIVE: To describe the factors commonly associated with the development of cryptococcal meningitis and the laboratory tests used in the detection of pathogens. METHODOLOGY: This is an exploratory study, mediated by literature, with works produced between 2000 and 2016, with emphasis on the description of the functional, laboratory and epidemiological aspects of the disease. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION: Cryptococcosis is strongly influenced by the action of the protein capsule and enzymes like phospholipase and urease. The most common laboratory procedure is the fungus research in Sabouraud agar, since the middle bromothymol canavanine-glycine-blue (CGB) can be run in the background. CONCLUSION: The study of the factors that enhance the pathogenicity of fungal meningitis can assist in the development of future therapeutic measures aimed to control mortality rates. Keywords: Cryptococcus neoformans. Meningitis. Cryptococcal meningitis

    An open access database for the evaluation of heart sound algorithms

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    This is an author-created, un-copyedited version of an article published in Physiological Measurement. IOP Publishing Ltd is not responsible for any errors or omissions in this version of the manuscript or any version derived from it. The Version of Record is available online at https://doi.org/10.1088/0967-3334/37/12/2181In the past few decades, analysis of heart sound signals (i.e. the phonocardiogram or PCG), especially for automated heart sound segmentation and classification, has been widely studied and has been reported to have the potential value to detect pathology accurately in clinical applications. However, comparative analyses of algorithms in the literature have been hindered by the lack of high-quality, rigorously validated, and standardized open databases of heart sound recordings. This paper describes a public heart sound database, assembled for an international competition, the PhysioNet/Computing in Cardiology (CinC) Challenge 2016. The archive comprises nine different heart sound databases sourced from multiple research groups around the world. It includes 2435 heart sound recordings in total collected from 1297 healthy subjects and patients with a variety of conditions, including heart valve disease and coronary artery disease. The recordings were collected from a variety of clinical or nonclinical (such as in-home visits) environments and equipment. The length of recording varied from several seconds to several minutes. This article reports detailed information about the subjects/patients including demographics (number, age, gender), recordings (number, location, state and time length), associated synchronously recorded signals, sampling frequency and sensor type used. We also provide a brief summary of the commonly used heart sound segmentation and classification methods, including open source code provided concurrently for the Challenge. A description of the PhysioNet/CinC Challenge 2016, including the main aims, the training and test sets, the hand corrected annotations for different heart sound states, the scoring mechanism, and associated open source code are provided. In addition, several potential benefits from the public heart sound database are discussed.This work was supported by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) grant R01-EB001659 from the National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering (NIBIB) and R01GM104987 from the National Institute of General Medical Sciences.Liu, C.; Springer, DC.; Li, Q.; Moody, B.; Abad Juan, RC.; Li, Q.; Moody, B.... (2016). An open access database for the evaluation of heart sound algorithms. Physiological Measurement. 37(12):2181-2213. doi:10.1088/0967-3334/37/12/2181S21812213371
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