4.7 Article

Cardiac arrhythmia beat classification using DOST and PSO tuned SVM

Journal

COMPUTER METHODS AND PROGRAMS IN BIOMEDICINE
Volume 136, Issue -, Pages 163-177

Publisher

ELSEVIER IRELAND LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.cmpb.2016.08.016

Keywords

Cardiac arrhythmia beat; DOST; PCA; SVM; PSO

Funding

  1. Department of Science and Technology, Government of India under DST-INSPIRE Fellowship Scheme [IF 120841]

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Background and objective: The increase in the number of deaths due to cardiovascular diseases (CVDs) has gained significant attention from the study of electrocardiogram (ECG) signals. These ECG signals are studied by the experienced cardiologist for accurate and proper diagnosis, but it becomes difficult and time-consuming for long-term recordings. Various signal processing techniques are studied to analyze the ECG signal, but they bear limitations due to the non-stationary behavior of ECG signals. Hence, this study aims to improve the classification accuracy rate and provide an automated diagnostic solution for the detection of cardiac arrhythmias. Methods: The proposed methodology consists of four stages, i.e. filtering, R-peak detection, feature extraction and classification stages. In this study, Wavelet based approach is used to filter the raw ECG signal, whereas Pan Tompkins algorithm is used for detecting the R-peak inside the ECG signal. In the feature extraction stage, discrete orthogonal Stockwell transform (DOST) approach is presented for an efficient time-frequency representation (i.e. morphological descriptors) of a time domain signal and retains the absolute phase information to distinguish the various non-stationary behavior ECG signals. Moreover, these morphological descriptors are further reduced in lower dimensional space by using principal component analysis and combined with the dynamic features (i.e based on RR interval of the ECG signals) of the input signal. This combination of two different kinds of descriptors represents each feature set of an input signal that is utilized for classification into subsequent categories by employing PSO tuned support vector machines (SVM). Results: The proposed methodology is validated on the baseline MIT-BIH arrhythmia database and evaluated under two assessment schemes, yielding an improved overall accuracy of 99.18% for sixteen classes in the category-based and 89.10% for five classes (mapped according to AAMI standard) in the patient-based assessment scheme respectively to the state of-art diagnosis. The results reported are further compared to the existing methodologies in literature. Conclusions: The proposed feature representation of cardiac signals based on symmetrical features along with PSO based optimization technique for the SVM classifier reported an improved classification accuracy in both the assessment schemes evaluated on the benchmark MIT-BIH arrhythmia database and hence can be utilized for automated computer aided diagnosis of cardiac arrhythmia beats. (C) 2016 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.

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