DocumentCode :
875874
Title :
Suitability of Dysphonia Measurements for Telemonitoring of Parkinson's Disease
Author :
Little, M.A. ; McSharry, P.E. ; Hunter, E.J. ; Spielman, J. ; Ramig, L.O.
Author_Institution :
Syst. Anal., Modeling & Prediction Group, Univ. of Oxford, Oxford
Volume :
56
Issue :
4
fYear :
2009
fDate :
4/1/2009 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage :
1015
Lastpage :
1022
Abstract :
In this paper, we present an assessment of the practical value of existing traditional and nonstandard measures for discriminating healthy people from people with Parkinson´s disease (PD) by detecting dysphonia. We introduce a new measure of dysphonia, pitch period entropy (PPE), which is robust to many uncontrollable confounding effects including noisy acoustic environments and normal, healthy variations in voice frequency. We collected sustained phonations from 31 people, 23 with PD. We then selected ten highly uncorrelated measures, and an exhaustive search of all possible combinations of these measures finds four that in combination lead to overall correct classification performance of 91.4%, using a kernel support vector machine. In conclusion, we find that nonstandard methods in combination with traditional harmonics-to-noise ratios are best able to separate healthy from PD subjects. The selected nonstandard methods are robust to many uncontrollable variations in acoustic environment and individual subjects, and are thus well suited to telemonitoring applications.
Keywords :
biomedical telemetry; diseases; medical disorders; neurophysiology; patient monitoring; speech processing; support vector machines; Parkinson disease; dysphonia measurement; harmonics-to-noise ratio; kernel support vector machine; nervous system; noisy acoustic environment; pitch period entropy; speech analysis; telemedicine; telemonitoring; uncorrelated measure; voice frequency; Acoustic measurements; Acoustic noise; Acoustic signal detection; Entropy; Frequency measurement; Kernel; Parkinson´s disease; Robustness; Support vector machines; Working environment noise; Biomedical measurements; nervous system; speech analysis; telemedicine;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Biomedical Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0018-9294
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/TBME.2008.2005954
Filename :
4636708
Link To Document :
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