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Predictive Modeling of Biomedical Signals Using Controlled Spatial Transformation

Published 31 Oct 2018 in eess.SP | (1811.00079v1)

Abstract: An important paradigm in smart health is developing diagnosis tools and monitoring a patient's heart activity through processing Electrocardiogram (ECG) signals is a key example, sue to high mortality rate of heart-related disease. However, current heart monitoring devices suffer from two important drawbacks: i) failure in capturing inter-patient variability, and ii) incapability of identifying heart abnormalities ahead of time to take effective preventive and therapeutic interventions. This paper proposed a novel predictive signal processing method to solve these issues. We propose a two-step classification framework for ECG signals, where a global classifier recognizes severe abnormalities by comparing the signal against a universal reference model. The seemingly normal signals are then passed through a personalized classifier, to recognize mild but informative signal morphology distortions. The key idea is to develop a novel deviation analysis based on a controlled nonlinear transformation to capture significant deviations of the signal towards any of predefined abnormality classes. Here, we embrace the proven but overlooked fact that certain features of ECG signals reflect underlying cardiac abnormalities before the occurrences of cardiac disease. The proposed method achieves a classification accuracy of 96.6% and provides a unique feature of predictive analysis by providing warnings before critical heart conditions. In particular, the chance of observing a severe problem (a red alarm) is raised by about 5% to 10% after observing a yellow alarm of the same type. Although we used this methodology to provide early precaution messages to elderly and high-risk heart-patients, the proposed method is general and applicable to similar bio-medical signal processing applications.

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