11,259 research outputs found
Performance evaluation of the Hilbert–Huang transform for respiratory sound analysis and its application to continuous adventitious sound characterization
© 2016. This manuscript version is made available under the CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 license http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/The use of the Hilbert–Huang transform in the analysis of biomedical signals has increased during the past few years, but its use for respiratory sound (RS) analysis is still limited. The technique includes two steps: empirical mode decomposition (EMD) and instantaneous frequency (IF) estimation. Although the mode mixing (MM) problem of EMD has been widely discussed, this technique continues to be used in many RS analysis algorithms.
In this study, we analyzed the MM effect in RS signals recorded from 30 asthmatic patients, and studied the performance of ensemble EMD (EEMD) and noise-assisted multivariate EMD (NA-MEMD) as means for preventing this effect. We propose quantitative parameters for measuring the size, reduction of MM, and residual noise level of each method. These parameters showed that EEMD is a good solution for MM, thus outperforming NA-MEMD. After testing different IF estimators, we propose KayÂżs method to calculate an EEMD-Kay-based Hilbert spectrum that offers high energy concentrations and high time and high frequency resolutions. We also propose an algorithm for the automatic characterization of continuous adventitious sounds (CAS). The tests performed showed that the proposed EEMD-Kay-based Hilbert spectrum makes it possible to determine CAS more precisely than other conventional time-frequency techniques.Postprint (author's final draft
The angular spectrum of the scattering coefficient map reveals subsurface colorectal cancer
Abstract Colorectal cancer diagnosis currently relies on histological detection of endoluminal neoplasia in biopsy specimens. However, clinical visual endoscopy provides no quantitative subsurface cancer information. In this ex vivo study of nine fresh human colon specimens, we report the first use of quantified subsurface scattering coefficient maps acquired by swept-source optical coherence tomography to reveal subsurface abnormities. We generate subsurface scattering coefficient maps with a novel wavelet-based-curve-fitting method that provides significantly improved accuracy. The angular spectra of scattering coefficient maps of normal tissues exhibit a spatial feature distinct from those of abnormal tissues. An angular spectrum index to quantify the differences between the normal and abnormal tissues is derived, and its strength in revealing subsurface cancer in ex vivo samples is statistically analyzed. The study demonstrates that the angular spectrum of the scattering coefficient map can effectively reveal subsurface colorectal cancer and potentially provide a fast and more accurate diagnosis
Statistical Properties and Applications of Empirical Mode Decomposition
Signal analysis is key to extracting information buried in noise. The decomposition of signal is a data analysis tool for determining the underlying physical components of a processed data set. However, conventional signal decomposition approaches such as wavelet analysis, Wagner-Ville, and various short-time Fourier spectrograms are inadequate to process real world signals. Moreover, most of the given techniques require \emph{a prior} knowledge of the processed signal, to select the proper decomposition basis, which makes them improper for a wide range of practical applications. Empirical Mode Decomposition (EMD) is a non-parametric and adaptive basis driver that is capable of breaking-down non-linear, non-stationary signals into an intrinsic and finite components called Intrinsic Mode Functions (IMF). In addition, EMD approximates a dyadic filter that isolates high frequency components, e.g. noise, in higher index IMFs. Despite of being widely used in different applications, EMD is an ad hoc solution. The adaptive performance of EMD comes at the expense of formulating a theoretical base. Therefore, numerical analysis is usually adopted in literature to interpret the behavior.
This dissertation involves investigating statistical properties of EMD and utilizing the outcome to enhance the performance of signal de-noising and spectrum sensing systems. The novel contributions can be broadly summarized in three categories: a statistical analysis of the probability distributions of the IMFs and a suggestion of Generalized Gaussian distribution (GGD) as a best fit distribution; a de-noising scheme based on a null-hypothesis of IMFs utilizing the unique filter behavior of EMD; and a novel noise estimation approach that is used to shift semi-blind spectrum sensing techniques into fully-blind ones based on the first IMF. These contributions are justified statistically and analytically and include comparison with other state of art techniques
Development of a Novel Dataset and Tools for Non-Invasive Fetal Electrocardiography Research
This PhD thesis presents the development of a novel open multi-modal dataset
for advanced studies on fetal cardiological assessment, along with a set of signal
processing tools for its exploitation. The Non-Invasive Fetal Electrocardiography
(ECG) Analysis (NInFEA) dataset features multi-channel electrophysiological
recordings characterized by high sampling frequency and digital resolution,
maternal respiration signal, synchronized fetal trans-abdominal pulsed-wave
Doppler (PWD) recordings and clinical annotations provided by expert
clinicians at the time of the signal collection. To the best of our knowledge,
there are no similar dataset available.
The signal processing tools targeted both the PWD and the non-invasive
fetal ECG, exploiting the recorded dataset. About the former, the study focuses
on the processing aimed at the preparation of the signal for the automatic
measurement of relevant morphological features, already adopted in the
clinical practice for cardiac assessment. To this aim, a relevant step is the automatic
identification of the complete and measurable cardiac cycles in the PWD
videos: a rigorous methodology was deployed for the analysis of the different
processing steps involved in the automatic delineation of the PWD envelope,
then implementing different approaches for the supervised classification of the
cardiac cycles, discriminating between complete and measurable vs. malformed
or incomplete ones. Finally, preliminary measurement algorithms were also developed
in order to extract clinically relevant parameters from the PWD.
About the fetal ECG, this thesis concentrated on the systematic analysis of
the adaptive filters performance for non-invasive fetal ECG extraction processing,
identified as the reference tool throughout the thesis. Then, two studies
are reported: one on the wavelet-based denoising of the extracted fetal ECG
and another one on the fetal ECG quality assessment from the analysis of the
raw abdominal recordings.
Overall, the thesis represents an important milestone in the field, by promoting
the open-data approach and introducing automated analysis tools that
could be easily integrated in future medical devices
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