4.7 Article

Physics-informed neural networks for modeling physiological time series for cuffless blood pressure estimation

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NPJ DIGITAL MEDICINE
卷 6, 期 1, 页码 -

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NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41746-023-00853-4

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The use of AI-driven physiological monitoring technology has created opportunities for extracting precise medical information from off-the-shelf wearables. However, these algorithms require significant amounts of ground truth data for training. This study proposes a physics-informed neural network model that uses minimal ground truth information to extract complex cardiovascular information, reducing the need for large training data sets.
The bold vision of AI-driven pervasive physiological monitoring, through the proliferation of off-the-shelf wearables that began a decade ago, has created immense opportunities to extract actionable information for precision medicine. These AI algorithms model input-output relationships of a system that, in many cases, exhibits complex nature and personalization requirements. A particular example is cuffless blood pressure estimation using wearable bioimpedance. However, these algorithms need training over significant amount of ground truth data. In the context of biomedical applications, collecting ground truth data, particularly at the personalized level is challenging, burdensome, and in some cases infeasible. Our objective is to establish physics-informed neural network (PINN) models for physiological time series data that would use minimal ground truth information to extract complex cardiovascular information. We achieve this by building Taylor's approximation for gradually changing known cardiovascular relationships between input and output (e.g., sensor measurements to blood pressure) and incorporating this approximation into our proposed neural network training. The effectiveness of the framework is demonstrated through a case study: continuous cuffless BP estimation from time series bioimpedance data. We show that by using PINNs over the state-of-the-art time series models tested on the same datasets, we retain high correlations (systolic: 0.90, diastolic: 0.89) and low error (systolic: 1.3 +/- 7.6 mmHg, diastolic: 0.6 +/- 6.4 mmHg) while reducing the amount of ground truth training data on average by a factor of 15. This could be helpful in developing future AI algorithms to help interpret pervasive physiologic data using minimal amount of training data.

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