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1.
Biomedicines ; 11(3)2023 Mar 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36979795

ABSTRACT

The Human Activity Recognition (HAR) system is the hottest research area in clinical research. The HAR plays a vital role in learning about a patient's abnormal activities; based upon this information, the patient's psychological state can be estimated. An epileptic seizure is a neurological disorder of the human brain and affects millions of people worldwide. If epilepsy is diagnosed correctly and in an early stage, then up to 70% of people can be seizure-free. There is a need for intelligent automatic HAR systems that help clinicians diagnose neurological disorders accurately. In this research, we proposed a Deep Learning (DL) model that enables the detection of epileptic seizures in an automated way, addressing a need in clinical research. To recognize epileptic seizures from brain activities, EEG is a raw but good source of information. In previous studies, many techniques used raw data from EEG to help recognize epileptic patient activities; however, the applied method of extracting features required much intensive expertise from clinical aspects such as radiology and clinical methods. The image data are also used to diagnose epileptic seizures, but applying Machine Learning (ML) methods could address the overfitting problem. In this research, we mainly focused on classifying epilepsy through physical epileptic activities instead of feature engineering and performed the detection of epileptic seizures in three steps. In the first step, we used the open-source numerical dataset of epilepsy of Bonn university from the UCI Machine Learning repository. In the second step, data were fed to the proposed ELM model for training in different training and testing ratios with a little bit of rescaling because the dataset was already pre-processed, normalized, and restructured. In the third step, epileptic and non-epileptic activity was recognized, and in this step, EEG signal feature extraction was automatically performed by a DL model named ELM; features were selected by a Feature Selection (FS) algorithm based on ELM and the final classification was performed using the ELM classifier. In our presented research, seven different ML algorithms were applied for the binary classification of epileptic activities, including K-Nearest Neighbor (KNN), Naïve Bayes (NB), Logistic Regression (LR), Stochastic Gradient Boosting Classifier (SGDC), Gradient Boosting Classifier (GB), Decision Trees (DT), and three deep learning models named Extreme Learning Machine (ELM), Long Short-Term Memory (LSTM), and Artificial Neural Network (ANN). After deep analysis, it is observed that the best results were obtained by our proposed DL model, Extreme Learning Machine (ELM), with an accuracy of 100% accuracy and a 0.99 AUC. Such high performance has not attained in previous research. The proposed model's performance was checked with other models in terms of performance parameters, namely confusion matrix, accuracy, precision, recall, F1-score, specificity, sensitivity, and the ROC curve.

2.
Life (Basel) ; 13(1)2023 Jan 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36676082

ABSTRACT

The emergency department of hospitals receives a massive number of patients with wrist fracture. For the clinical diagnosis of a suspected fracture, X-ray imaging is the major screening tool. A wrist fracture is a significant global health concern for children, adolescents, and the elderly. A missed diagnosis of wrist fracture on medical imaging can have significant consequences for patients, resulting in delayed treatment and poor functional recovery. Therefore, an intelligent method is needed in the medical department to precisely diagnose wrist fracture via an automated diagnosing tool by considering it a second option for doctors. In this research, a fused model of the deep learning method, a convolutional neural network (CNN), and long short-term memory (LSTM) is proposed to detect wrist fractures from X-ray images. It gives a second option to doctors to diagnose wrist facture using the computer vision method to lessen the number of missed fractures. The dataset acquired from Mendeley comprises 192 wrist X-ray images. In this framework, image pre-processing is applied, then the data augmentation approach is used to solve the class imbalance problem by generating rotated oversamples of images for minority classes during the training process, and pre-processed images and augmented normalized images are fed into a 28-layer dilated CNN (DCNN) to extract deep valuable features. Deep features are then fed to the proposed LSTM network to distinguish wrist fractures from normal ones. The experimental results of the DCNN-LSTM with and without augmentation is compared with other deep learning models. The proposed work is also compared to existing algorithms in terms of accuracy, sensitivity, specificity, precision, the F1-score, and kappa. The results show that the DCNN-LSTM fusion achieves higher accuracy and has high potential for medical applications to use as a second option.

3.
J Healthc Eng ; 2022: 1678000, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35991297

ABSTRACT

The process of pneumonia detection has been the focus of researchers as it has proved itself to be one of the most dangerous and life-threatening disorders. In recent years, many machine learning and deep learning algorithms have been applied in an attempt to automate this process but none of them has been successful significantly to achieve the highest possible accuracy. In a similar attempt, we propose an enhanced approach of a deep learning model called restricted Boltzmann machine (RBM) which is named enhanced RBM (ERBM). One of the major drawbacks associated with the standard format of RBM is its random weight initialization which leads to improper feature learning of the model during the training phase, resulting in poor performance of the machine. This problem has been tried to eliminate in this work by finding the differences between the means of a specific feature vector and the means of all features given as inputs to the machine. By performing this process, the reconstruction of the actual features is increased which ultimately reduces the error generated during the training phase of the model. The developed model has been applied to three different datasets of pneumonia diseases and the results have been compared with other state of the art techniques using different performance evaluation parameters. The proposed model gave highest accuracy of 98.56% followed by standard RBM, SVM, KNN, and decision tree which gave accuracies of 97.53%, 92.62%, 91.64%, and 88.77%, respectively, for dataset named dataset 2. Similarly, for the dataset 1, the highest accuracy of 96.66 has been observed for the eRBM followed by srRBM, KNN, decision tree, and SVM which gave accuracies of 90.22%, 89.34%, 87.65%, and 86.55%, respectively. In the same way, the accuracies observed for the dataset 3 by eRBM, standard RBM, KNN, decision tree, and SVM are 92.45%, 90.98%, 87.54%, 85.49%, and 84.54%, respectively. Similar observations can also be seen for other performance parameters showing the efficiency of the proposed model. As revealed in the results obtained, a significant improvement has been observed in the working of the RBM by introducing a new method of weight initialization during the training phase. The results show that the improved model outperforms other models in terms of different performance evaluation parameters, namely, accuracy, sensitivity, specificity, F1-score, and ROC curve.


Subject(s)
Machine Learning , Pneumonia , Algorithms , Humans , Pneumonia/diagnostic imaging , ROC Curve , X-Rays
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