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1.
Artif Intell Med ; 150: 102821, 2024 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38553161

ABSTRACT

In the field of medical diagnosis and patient monitoring, effective pattern recognition in neurological time-series data is essential. Traditional methods predominantly based on statistical or probabilistic learning and inference often struggle with multivariate, multi-source, state-varying, and noisy data while also posing privacy risks due to excessive information collection and modeling. Furthermore, these methods often overlook critical statistical information, such as the distribution of data points and inherent uncertainties. To address these challenges, we introduce an information theory-based pipeline that leverages specialized features to identify patterns in neurological time-series data while minimizing privacy risks. We incorporate various entropy methods based on the characteristics of different scenarios and entropy. For stochastic state transition applications, we incorporate Shannon's entropy, entropy rates, entropy production, and the von Neumann entropy of Markov chains. When state modeling is impractical, we select and employ approximate entropy, increment entropy, dispersion entropy, phase entropy, and slope entropy. The pipeline's effectiveness and scalability are demonstrated through pattern analysis in a dementia care dataset and also an epileptic and a myocardial infarction dataset. The results indicate that our information theory-based pipeline can achieve average performance improvements across various models on the recall rate, F1 score, and accuracy by up to 13.08 percentage points, while enhancing inference efficiency by reducing the number of model parameters by an average of 3.10 times. Thus, our approach opens a promising avenue for improved, efficient, and critical statistical information-considered pattern recognition in medical time-series data.


Subject(s)
Entropy , Humans , Markov Chains , Time Factors
2.
NPJ Digit Med ; 7(1): 11, 2024 Jan 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38218738

ABSTRACT

Urinary Tract Infections (UTIs) are one of the most prevalent bacterial infections in older adults and a significant contributor to unplanned hospital admissions in People Living with Dementia (PLWD), with early detection being crucial due to the predicament of reporting symptoms and limited help-seeking behaviour. The most common diagnostic tool is urine sample analysis, which can be time-consuming and is only employed where UTI clinical suspicion exists. In this method development and proof-of-concept study, participants living with dementia were monitored via low-cost devices in the home that passively measure activity, sleep, and nocturnal physiology. Using 27828 person-days of remote monitoring data (from 117 participants), we engineered features representing symptoms used for diagnosing a UTI. We then evaluate explainable machine learning techniques in passively calculating UTI risk and perform stratification on scores to support clinical translation and allow control over the balance between alert rate and sensitivity and specificity. The proposed UTI algorithm achieves a sensitivity of 65.3% (95% Confidence Interval (CI) = 64.3-66.2) and specificity of 70.9% (68.6-73.1) when predicting UTIs on unseen participants and after risk stratification, a sensitivity of 74.7% (67.9-81.5) and specificity of 87.9% (85.0-90.9). In addition, feature importance methods reveal that the largest contributions to the predictions were bathroom visit statistics, night-time respiratory rate, and the number of previous UTI events, aligning with the literature. Our machine learning method alerts clinicians of UTI risk in subjects, enabling earlier detection and enhanced screening when considering treatment.

3.
Sci Data ; 10(1): 606, 2023 09 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37689815

ABSTRACT

Dementia is a progressive condition that affects cognitive and functional abilities. There is a need for reliable and continuous health monitoring of People Living with Dementia (PLWD) to improve their quality of life and support their independent living. Healthcare services often focus on addressing and treating already established health conditions that affect PLWD. Managing these conditions continuously can inform better decision-making earlier for higher-quality care management for PLWD. The Technology Integrated Health Management (TIHM) project developed a new digital platform to routinely collect longitudinal, observational, and measurement data, within the home and apply machine learning and analytical models for the detection and prediction of adverse health events affecting the well-being of PLWD. This work describes the TIHM dataset collected during the second phase (i.e., feasibility study) of the TIHM project. The data was collected from homes of 56 PLWD and associated with events and clinical observations (daily activity, physiological monitoring, and labels for health-related conditions). The study recorded an average of 50 days of data per participant, totalling 2803 days.


Subject(s)
Dementia , Quality of Life , Humans , Activities of Daily Living , Delivery of Health Care , Health Facilities
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