72 research outputs found
Different Techniques and Algorithms for Biomedical Signal Processing
This paper is intended to give a broad overview of the complex area of biomedical and their use in signal processing. It contains sufficient theoretical materials to provide some understanding of the techniques involved for the researcher in the field. This paper consists of two parts: feature extraction and pattern recognition. The first part provides a basic understanding as to how the time domain signal of patient are converted to the frequency domain for analysis. The second part provides basic for understanding the theoretical and practical approaches to the development of neural network models and their implementation in modeling biological syste
Local DTW Coefficients and Pitch Feature for Back-Propagation NN Digits Recognition
This paper presents a method to extract existing speech features in dynamic time warping path which originally was derived from LPC. This extracted feature coefficients represent as an input for neural network back-propagation. The coefficients are normalized with respect to the reference pattern according to the average number of frames over the samples recorded. This is due to neural network (NN) limitation where a fixed amount of input nodes are needed for every input class. The new feature processing used the famous frame matching technique, which is Dynamic Time Warping (DTW) to fix the input size to a fix number of input vectors. The LPC features vectors are aligned between the source frames to the template using our DTW frame fixing (DTW-FF) algorithm. By doing frame fixing, the source and template frames are adjusted so that they have the same number of frames. The speech recognition is performed using the back-propagation neural network (BPNN) algorithm to enhance the recognition performance. The results compare DTW using LPC coefficients to BPNN with DTW-FF coefficients. Added pitch feature investigate the improvement made to the previous experiment using different number of hidden neurons
Analysis and classification of myocardial infarction tissue from echocardiography images based on texture analysis
Texture analysis is an important characteristic for automatic visual inspection for surface and object identification from medical images and other type of images. This paper presents an application of wavelet extension and Gray level cooccurrence matrix (GLCM) for diagnosis of myocardial infarction tissue from echocardiography images. Many of applications approach have provided good result in different fields of application, but could not implemented at all when texture samples are small dimensions caused by low quality of images. Wavelet extension procedure is used to determine the frequency bands carrying the most information about the texture by decomposition images into multiple frequency bands and to form an image approximation with higher resolution. Thus, wavelet extension procedure offers the ability to robust feature extraction in
images. The gray level co-occurrence matrices are computed for each sub-band. The feature vector of testing image and other feature vector as normal image classified by Mahalanobis distance to decide whether the test image is infarction or not
Short-segment heart sound classification using an ensemble of deep convolutional neural networks
This paper proposes a framework based on deep convolutional neural networks
(CNNs) for automatic heart sound classification using short-segments of
individual heart beats. We design a 1D-CNN that directly learns features from
raw heart-sound signals, and a 2D-CNN that takes inputs of two- dimensional
time-frequency feature maps based on Mel-frequency cepstral coefficients
(MFCC). We further develop a time-frequency CNN ensemble (TF-ECNN) combining
the 1D-CNN and 2D-CNN based on score-level fusion of the class probabilities.
On the large PhysioNet CinC challenge 2016 database, the proposed CNN models
outperformed traditional classifiers based on support vector machine and hidden
Markov models with various hand-crafted time- and frequency-domain features.
Best classification scores with 89.22% accuracy and 89.94% sensitivity were
achieved by the ECNN, and 91.55% specificity and 88.82% modified accuracy by
the 2D-CNN alone on the test set.Comment: 8 pages, 1 figure, conferenc
Discriminative Tandem Features for HMM-based EEG Classification
Abstract—We investigate the use of discriminative feature extractors in tandem configuration with generative EEG classification system. Existing studies on dynamic EEG classification typically use hidden Markov models (HMMs) which lack discriminative capability. In this paper, a linear and a non-linear classifier are discriminatively trained to produce complementary input features to the conventional HMM system. Two sets of tandem features are derived from linear discriminant analysis (LDA) projection output and multilayer perceptron (MLP) class-posterior probability, before appended to the standard autoregressive (AR) features. Evaluation on a two-class motor-imagery classification task shows that both the proposed tandem features yield consistent gains over the AR baseline, resulting in significant relative improvement of 6.2% and 11.2 % for the LDA and MLP features respectively. We also explore portability of these features across different subjects. Index Terms- Artificial neural network-hidden Markov models, EEG classification, brain-computer-interface (BCI)
Estimating Time-Varying Effective Connectivity in High-Dimensional fMRI Data Using Regime-Switching Factor Models
Recent studies on analyzing dynamic brain connectivity rely on sliding-window
analysis or time-varying coefficient models which are unable to capture both
smooth and abrupt changes simultaneously. Emerging evidence suggests
state-related changes in brain connectivity where dependence structure
alternates between a finite number of latent states or regimes. Another
challenge is inference of full-brain networks with large number of nodes. We
employ a Markov-switching dynamic factor model in which the state-driven
time-varying connectivity regimes of high-dimensional fMRI data are
characterized by lower-dimensional common latent factors, following a
regime-switching process. It enables a reliable, data-adaptive estimation of
change-points of connectivity regimes and the massive dependencies associated
with each regime. We consider the switching VAR to quantity the dynamic
effective connectivity. We propose a three-step estimation procedure: (1)
extracting the factors using principal component analysis (PCA) and (2)
identifying dynamic connectivity states using the factor-based switching vector
autoregressive (VAR) models in a state-space formulation using Kalman filter
and expectation-maximization (EM) algorithm, and (3) constructing the
high-dimensional connectivity metrics for each state based on subspace
estimates. Simulation results show that our proposed estimator outperforms the
K-means clustering of time-windowed coefficients, providing more accurate
estimation of regime dynamics and connectivity metrics in high-dimensional
settings. Applications to analyzing resting-state fMRI data identify dynamic
changes in brain states during rest, and reveal distinct directed connectivity
patterns and modular organization in resting-state networks across different
states.Comment: 21 page
An artifacts removal post-processing for epiphyseal region-of-interest (EROI) localization in automated bone age assessment (BAA)
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Segmentation is the most crucial part in the computer-aided bone age assessment. A well-known type of segmentation performed in the system is adaptive segmentation. While providing better result than global thresholding method, the adaptive segmentation produces a lot of unwanted noise that could affect the latter process of epiphysis extraction.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>A proposed method with anisotropic diffusion as pre-processing and a novel Bounded Area Elimination (BAE) post-processing algorithm to improve the algorithm of ossification site localization technique are designed with the intent of improving the adaptive segmentation result and the region-of interest (ROI) localization accuracy.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>The results are then evaluated by quantitative analysis and qualitative analysis using texture feature evaluation. The result indicates that the image homogeneity after anisotropic diffusion has improved averagely on each age group for 17.59%. Results of experiments showed that the smoothness has been improved averagely 35% after BAE algorithm and the improvement of ROI localization has improved for averagely 8.19%. The MSSIM has improved averagely 10.49% after performing the BAE algorithm on the adaptive segmented hand radiograph.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>The result indicated that hand radiographs which have undergone anisotropic diffusion have greatly reduced the noise in the segmented image and the result as well indicated that the BAE algorithm proposed is capable of removing the artifacts generated in adaptive segmentation.</p
Human facial neural activities and gesture recognition for machine-interfacing applications
The authors present a new method of recognizing different human facial gestures through their neural activities and muscle movements, which can be used in machine-interfacing applications. Human–machine interface (HMI) technology utilizes human neural activities as input controllers for the machine. Recently, much work has been done on the specific application of facial electromyography (EMG)-based HMI, which have used limited and fixed numbers of facial gestures. In this work, a multipurpose interface is suggested that can support 2–11 control commands that can be applied to various HMI systems. The significance of this work is finding the most accurate facial gestures for any application with a maximum of eleven control commands. Eleven facial gesture EMGs are recorded from ten volunteers. Detected EMGs are passed through a band-pass filter and root mean square features are extracted. Various combinations of gestures with a different number of gestures in each group are made from the existing facial gestures. Finally, all combinations are trained and classified by a Fuzzy c-means classifier. In conclusion, combinations with the highest recognition accuracy in each group are chosen. An average accuracy >90% of chosen combinations proved their ability to be used as command controllers
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