Title :
Autoadaptivity and Optimization in Distributed ECG Interpretation
Author :
Augustyniak, Piotr
Author_Institution :
Akademia Gorniczo-Hutnicza Univ. of Sci. & Technol., Krakow, Poland
fDate :
3/1/2010 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
This paper addresses principal issues of the ECG interpretation adaptivity in a distributed surveillance network. In the age of pervasive access to wireless digital communication, distributed biosignal interpretation networks may not only optimally solve difficult medical cases, but also adapt the data acquisition, interpretation, and transmission to the variable patient´s status and availability of technical resources. The background of such adaptivity is the innovative use of results from the automatic ECG analysis to the seamless remote modification of the interpreting software. Since the medical relevance of issued diagnostic data depends on the patient´s status, the interpretation adaptivity implies the flexibility of report content and frequency. Proposed solutions are based on the research on human experts behavior, procedures reliability, and usage statistics. Despite the limited scale of our prototype client-server application, the tests yielded very promising results: the transmission channel occupation was reduced by 2.6 to 5.6 times comparing to the rigid reporting mode and the improvement of the remotely computed diagnostic outcome was achieved in case of over 80% of software adaptation attempts.
Keywords :
biomedical telemetry; client-server systems; electrocardiography; health care; medical diagnostic computing; medical signal processing; patient diagnosis; patient monitoring; ubiquitous computing; wireless sensor networks; automatic ECG analysis; client-server application; diagnostic data; distributed ECG interpretation autoadaptivity; distributed ECG interpretation optimisation; distributed biosignal interpretation networks; distributed surveillance network; electrocardiography; human experts behavior; procedure reliability; remotely computed diagnostics; report content flexibility; report frequency flexibility; transmission channel occupation; usage statistics; wireless digital communication; Distributed systems; e-health; home care; pervasive ECG monitoring; ubiquitous computing; Algorithms; Diagnosis; Electrocardiography; Humans; Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted; Software; Telemedicine; Telemetry;
Journal_Title :
Information Technology in Biomedicine, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TITB.2009.2038151