4.4 Article

Artificial Neural Network-Based Automatic Detection of Food Intake for Neuromodulation in Treating Obesity and Diabetes

Journal

OBESITY SURGERY
Volume 30, Issue 7, Pages 2547-2557

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11695-020-04511-6

Keywords

Food intake detection; Obesity; Diabetes; Neuromodulation; Machine learning

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Purpose Neuromodulation, such as vagal nerve stimulation and intestinal electrical stimulation, has been introduced for the treatment of obesity and diabetes. Ideally, neuromodulation should be applied automatically after food intake. The purpose of this study was to develop a method of automatic food intake detection through dynamic analysis of heart rate variability (HRV). Materials and Methods Two experiments were conducted: (1) a small sample series with a standard test meal and (2) a large sample series with varying meal size. Electrocardiograms (ECGs) were collected in the fasting and postprandial states. Each ECG was processed to compute the HRV. For each HRV segment, time- and frequency-domain features were derived and used as inputs to train and test an artificial neural network (ANN). The ANN was trained and tested with different cross-validation methods. Results The highest classification accuracy reached with leave-one-subject-out-leave-one-sample-out cross-validation was 0.93 in experiment 1 and 0.88 in experiment 2. Retraining the ANN on recordings of a subject drastically increased the achieved accuracy for that subject to values of 0.995 and 0.95 in experiments 1 and 2, respectively. Conclusions Automatic food intake detection by ANNs, using features from the HRV, is feasible and may have a great potential for neuromodulation-based treatments of meal-related disorders.

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