Detection of atrial fibrillation and other abnormal rhythms from ECG using a multi-layer classifier architecture.
Journal
Physiological measurement
ISSN: 1361-6579
Titre abrégé: Physiol Meas
Pays: England
ID NLM: 9306921
Informations de publication
Date de publication:
04 06 2019
04 06 2019
Historique:
pubmed:
17
1
2019
medline:
10
4
2020
entrez:
17
1
2019
Statut:
epublish
Résumé
Atrial fibrillation (AF) and other types of abnormal heart rhythm are related to multiple fatal cardiovascular diseases that affect the quality of human life. Hence the development of an automated robust method that can reliably detect AF, in addition to other non-sinus and sinus rhythms, would be a valuable addition to medicine. The present study focuses on developing an algorithm for the classification of short, single-lead electrocardiogram (ECG) recordings into normal, AF, other abnormal rhythms and noisy classes. The proposed classification framework presents a two-layer, three-node architecture comprising binary classifiers. PQRST markers are detected on each ECG recording, followed by noise removal using a spectrogram power based novel adaptive thresholding scheme. Next, a feature pool comprising time, frequency, morphological and statistical domain ECG features is extracted for the classification task. At each node of the classification framework, suitable feature subsets, identified through feature ranking and dimension reduction, are selected for use. Adaptive boosting is selected as the classifier for the present case. The training data comprises 8528 ECG recordings provided under the PhysioNet 2017 Challenge. F1 scores averaged across the three non-noisy classes are taken as the performance metric. The final five-fold cross-validation score achieved by the proposed framework on the training data has high accuracy with low variance (0.8254 [Formula: see text] 0.0043). Further, the proposed algorithm has achieved joint first place in the PhysioNet/Computing in Cardiology Challenge 2017 with a score of 0.83 computed on a hidden test dataset.
Identifiants
pubmed: 30650387
doi: 10.1088/1361-6579/aaff04
doi:
Types de publication
Journal Article
Langues
eng
Sous-ensembles de citation
IM