4.6 Article

Health Data Driven on Continuous Blood Pressure Based on Gradient Boosting Decision Tree Algorithm

Journal

IEEE ACCESS
Volume 7, Issue -, Pages 32423-32433

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/ACCESS.2019.2902217

Keywords

GBDT; pruning; blood pressure prediction; health monitoring

Funding

  1. Yorkshire Innovation Fund, U.K.
  2. iMonSys Ltd. U.K.
  3. National Natural Science Foundation of China [61802332, 61807028, 61772451, 61772449, 61572420]
  4. Natural Science Foundation of Hebei Province, China [F2016203330]
  5. Doctoral Foundation Program of Yanshan University [BL18012]

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Diseases related to issues with blood pressure are becoming a major threat to human health. With the development of telemedicine monitoring applications, a growing number of corresponding devices are being marketed, such as the use of remote monitoring for the purposes of increasing the autonomy of the elderly and thus encouraging a healthier and longer health span. Using machine learning algorithms to measure blood pressure at a continuous rate is a feasible way to provide models and analysis for telemedicine monitoring data and predicting blood pressure. For this paper, we applied the gradient boosting decision tree (GBDT) while predicting blood pressure rates based on the human physiological data collected by the EIMO device. EIMO equipment-specific signal acquisition includes ECG and PPG. In order to avoid over-fitting, the optimal parameters are selected via the cross-validation method. Consequently, our method has displayed a higher accuracy rate and better performance in calculating the mean absolute error evaluation index than methods, such as the traditional least squares method, ridge regression, lasso regression, ElasticNet, SVR, and KNN algorithm. When predicting the blood pressure of a single individual, calculating the systolic pressure displays an accuracy rate of above 70% and above 64% for calculating the diastolic pressure with GBDT, with the prediction time being less than 0.1 s. In conclusion, applying the GBDT is the best method for predicting the blood pressure of multiple individuals: with the inclusion of data such as age, body fat, ratio, and height, algorithm accuracy improves, which in turn indicates that the inclusion of new features aids prediction performance.

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