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A Catalogue of Machine Learning Algorithms for Healthcare Risk Predictions.
Mavrogiorgou, Argyro; Kiourtis, Athanasios; Kleftakis, Spyridon; Mavrogiorgos, Konstantinos; Zafeiropoulos, Nikolaos; Kyriazis, Dimosthenis.
  • Mavrogiorgou A; Department of Digital Systems, University of Piraeus, 185 34 Piraeus, Greece.
  • Kiourtis A; Department of Digital Systems, University of Piraeus, 185 34 Piraeus, Greece.
  • Kleftakis S; Department of Digital Systems, University of Piraeus, 185 34 Piraeus, Greece.
  • Mavrogiorgos K; Department of Digital Systems, University of Piraeus, 185 34 Piraeus, Greece.
  • Zafeiropoulos N; Department of Digital Systems, University of Piraeus, 185 34 Piraeus, Greece.
  • Kyriazis D; Department of Digital Systems, University of Piraeus, 185 34 Piraeus, Greece.
Sensors (Basel) ; 22(22)2022 Nov 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-2110220
ABSTRACT
Extracting useful knowledge from proper data analysis is a very challenging task for efficient and timely decision-making. To achieve this, there exist a plethora of machine learning (ML) algorithms, while, especially in healthcare, this complexity increases due to the domain's requirements for analytics-based risk predictions. This manuscript proposes a data analysis mechanism experimented in diverse healthcare scenarios, towards constructing a catalogue of the most efficient ML algorithms to be used depending on the healthcare scenario's requirements and datasets, for efficiently predicting the onset of a disease. To this context, seven (7) different ML algorithms (Naïve Bayes, K-Nearest Neighbors, Decision Tree, Logistic Regression, Random Forest, Neural Networks, Stochastic Gradient Descent) have been executed on top of diverse healthcare scenarios (stroke, COVID-19, diabetes, breast cancer, kidney disease, heart failure). Based on a variety of performance metrics (accuracy, recall, precision, F1-score, specificity, confusion matrix), it has been identified that a sub-set of ML algorithms are more efficient for timely predictions under specific healthcare scenarios, and that is why the envisioned ML catalogue prioritizes the ML algorithms to be used, depending on the scenarios' nature and needed metrics. Further evaluation must be performed considering additional scenarios, involving state-of-the-art techniques (e.g., cloud deployment, federated ML) for improving the mechanism's efficiency.
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Full text: Available Collection: International databases Database: MEDLINE Main subject: COVID-19 Type of study: Experimental Studies / Prognostic study / Randomized controlled trials Limits: Humans Language: English Year: 2022 Document Type: Article Affiliation country: S22228615

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Full text: Available Collection: International databases Database: MEDLINE Main subject: COVID-19 Type of study: Experimental Studies / Prognostic study / Randomized controlled trials Limits: Humans Language: English Year: 2022 Document Type: Article Affiliation country: S22228615