REDT: a specialized transformer model for the respiratory phase and adventitious sound detection.

IF 2.3 4区 医学 Q3 BIOPHYSICS
Jianhong Wang, Gaoyang Dong, Yufei Shen, Xiaoling Xu, Minghui Zhang, Ping Sun
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background and objective.In contrast to respiratory sound classification, respiratory phase and adventitious sound event detection provides more detailed and accurate respiratory information, which is clinically important for respiratory disorders. However, current respiratory sound event detection models mainly use convolutional neural networks to generate frame-level predictions. A significant drawback of the frame-based model lies in its pursuit of optimal frame-level predictions rather than the best event-level ones. Moreover, it demands post-processing and is incapable of being trained in an entirely end-to-end fashion. Based on the above research status, this paper proposes an event-based transformer method -RespiratoryEventsDetectionTransformer (REDT) for multi-class respiratory sound event detection task to achieve efficient recognition and localization of the respiratory phase and adventitious sound events.Approach.Firstly, REDT approach employs the Transformer for time-frequency analysis of respiratory sound signals to extract essential features. Secondly, REDT converts these features into timestamp representations and achieves sound event detection by predicting the location and category of timestamps.Main results.Our method is validated on the public dataset HF_Lung_V1. The experimental results show that our F1 scores for inspiration, expiration, continuous adventitious sound and discontinuous adventitious sound are 90.5%, 77.3%, 78.9%, and 59.4%, respectively.Significance.These results demonstrate the method's significant performance in respiratory sound event detection.

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来源期刊
Physiological measurement
Physiological measurement 生物-工程:生物医学
CiteScore
5.50
自引率
9.40%
发文量
124
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: Physiological Measurement publishes papers about the quantitative assessment and visualization of physiological function in clinical research and practice, with an emphasis on the development of new methods of measurement and their validation. Papers are published on topics including: applied physiology in illness and health electrical bioimpedance, optical and acoustic measurement techniques advanced methods of time series and other data analysis biomedical and clinical engineering in-patient and ambulatory monitoring point-of-care technologies novel clinical measurements of cardiovascular, neurological, and musculoskeletal systems. measurements in molecular, cellular and organ physiology and electrophysiology physiological modeling and simulation novel biomedical sensors, instruments, devices and systems measurement standards and guidelines.
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