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Heart Rate and its Variability from Short-term ECG Recordings as Biomarkers for Detecting Mild Cognitive Impairment in Indian Population

Xavier, Anjo, Noble, Sneha, Joseph, Justin, Issac, Thomas Gregor

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Alterations in Heart Rate (HR) and Heart Rate Variability (HRV) can reflect autonomic dysfunction associated with neurodegeneration. We investigate the influence of Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI) on HR and its variability measures in the Indian population by designing a complete signal processing pipeline to detect the R-wave peaks and compute HR and HRV features from ECG recordings of 10 seconds, for point-of-care applications. The study cohort involves 297 urban participants, among which 48.48% are male and 51.51% are female. From the Addenbrooke's Cognitive Examination-III (ACE-III), MCI is detected in 19.19% of participants and the rest, 80.8% of them are cognitively healthy. Statistical features like central tendency (mean and root mean square (RMS) of the Normal-to-Normal (NN) intervals) and dispersion (standard deviation (SD) of all NN intervals (SDNN) and root mean square of successive differences of NN intervals (RMSSD)) of beat-to-beat intervals are computed. The Wilcoxon rank sum test reveals that mean of NN intervals (p = 0.0021), the RMS of NN intervals (p = 0.0014), the SDNN (p = 0.0192) and the RMSSD (p = 0.0206) values differ significantly between MCI and non-MCI classes, for a level of significance, 0.05. Machine learning classifiers like, Support Vector Machine (SVM), Discriminant Analysis (DA) and Naive Bayes (NB) driven by mean NN intervals, RMS, SDNN and RMSSD, show a high accuracy of 80.80% on each individual feature input. Individuals with MCI are observed to have comparatively higher HR than healthy subjects. HR and its variability can be considered as potential biomarkers for detecting MCI.


A Feature Selection Method for Driver Stress Detection Using Heart Rate Variability and Breathing Rate

Parsi, Ashkan, O'Callaghan, David, Lemley, Joseph

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Driver stress is a major cause of car accidents and death worldwide. Furthermore, persistent stress is a health problem, contributing to hypertension and other diseases of the cardiovascular system. Stress has a measurable impact on heart and breathing rates and stress levels can be inferred from such measurements. Galvanic skin response is a common test to measure the perspiration caused by both physiological and psychological stress, as well as extreme emotions. In this paper, galvanic skin response is used to estimate the ground truth stress levels. A feature selection technique based on the minimal redundancy-maximal relevance method is then applied to multiple heart rate variability and breathing rate metrics to identify a novel and optimal combination for use in detecting stress. The support vector machine algorithm with a radial basis function kernel was used along with these features to reliably predict stress. The proposed method has achieved a high level of accuracy on the target dataset.


An Exercise Fatigue Detection Model Based on Machine Learning Methods

Wu, Ming-Yen, Chen, Chi-Hua, Lo, Chi-Chun

arXiv.org Machine Learning

This study proposes an exercise fatigue detection model based on real-time clinical data which includes time domain analysis, frequency domain analysis, detrended fluctuation analysis, approximate entropy, and sample entropy. Furthermore, this study proposed a feature extraction method which is combined with an analytical hierarchy process to analyze and extract critical features. Finally, machine learning algorithms were adopted to analyze the data of each feature for the detection of exercise fatigue. The practical experimental results showed that the proposed exercise fatigue detection model and feature extraction method could precisely detect the level of exercise fatigue, and the accuracy of exercise fatigue detection could be improved up to 98.65%.