• DocumentCode
    1656622
  • Title

    Discrimination between healthy subjects and patients using lung sounds from multiple auscultation points

  • Author

    Matsutake, Shohei ; Yamashita, Masaru ; Matsunaga, Shinichiro

  • Author_Institution
    Dept. of Comput. & Inf. Sci., Nagasaki Univ., Nagasaki, Japan
  • fYear
    2013
  • Firstpage
    1296
  • Lastpage
    1300
  • Abstract
    In this paper, we propose a robust classification method to distinguish between a healthy subject and a patient with pulmonary emphysema using lung sound samples recorded from multiple auscultation points. Although the symptom of pulmonary emphysema can be determined from lung sounds that frequently include abnormal (i.e., adventitious) sounds, these are not observed in every auscultation point. Furthermore, noise pollution during auscultation makes high-accuracy detection difficult. To overcome these difficulties, our proposed method took into account lung sound samples from multiple auscultation points in diagnosing a patient. After the calculation of the acoustic likelihood for each respiratory phase based on the maximum likelihood approach using hidden Markov models and a segmental bigram, patient diagnosis was carried out based on the comparison of the average likelihood of all auscultation points between a patient and a healthy subject. Our classification method significantly increased the classification performance to 90.5% (using samples from four auscultation points) from the 82.7% classification performance of the conventional method (using a sample from one auscultation point), validating the usefulness of our proposed method.
  • Keywords
    acoustic signal processing; diseases; hidden Markov models; lung; medical signal processing; noise pollution; patient diagnosis; signal classification; abnormal sound; acoustic likelihood; adventitious sounds; auscultation points; classification performance; healthy subject; hidden Markov models; high-accuracy detection; lung sound samples; maximum likelihood approach; noise pollution; patient diagnosis; pulmonary emphysema patient; pulmonary emphysema symptom; respiratory phase; robust classification method; segmental bigram; Acoustics; Hidden Markov models; Lungs; Maximum likelihood detection; Noise; Stethoscope; adventitious sound; auscultation point; lung sound; patient classification;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Acoustics, Speech and Signal Processing (ICASSP), 2013 IEEE International Conference on
  • Conference_Location
    Vancouver, BC
  • ISSN
    1520-6149
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/ICASSP.2013.6637860
  • Filename
    6637860