Semi-supervised Stacked Label Consistent Autoencoder for Reconstruction and Analysis of Biomedical Signals | IEEE Journals & Magazine | IEEE Xplore

Semi-supervised Stacked Label Consistent Autoencoder for Reconstruction and Analysis of Biomedical Signals


Abstract:

Objective: An autoencoder-based framework that simultaneously reconstruct and classify biomedical signals is proposed. Previous work has treated reconstruction and classi...Show More

Abstract:

Objective: An autoencoder-based framework that simultaneously reconstruct and classify biomedical signals is proposed. Previous work has treated reconstruction and classification as separate problems. This is the first study that proposes a combined framework to address the issue in a holistic fashion. Methods: For telemonitoring purposes, reconstruction techniques of biomedical signals are largely based on compressed sensing (CS); these are “designed” techniques where the reconstruction formulation is based on some “assumption” regarding the signal. In this study, we propose a new paradigm for reconstruction-the reconstruction is “learned,” using an autoencoder; it does not require any assumption regarding the signal as long as there is sufficiently large training data. But since the final goal is to analyze/classify the signal, the system can also learn a linear classification map that is added inside the autoencoder. The ensuing optimization problem is solved using the Split Bregman technique. Results: Experiments were carried out on reconstructing and classifying electrocardiogram (ECG) (arrhythmia classification) and EEG (seizure classification) signals. Conclusion: Our proposed tool is capable of operating in a semi-supervised fashion. We show that our proposed method is better in reconstruction and more than an order magnitude faster than CS based methods; it is capable of real-time operation. Our method also yields better results than recently proposed classification methods. Significance: This is the first study offering an alternative to CS-based reconstruction. It also shows that the representation learning approach can yield better results than traditional methods that use hand-crafted features for signal analysis.
Published in: IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering ( Volume: 64, Issue: 9, September 2017)
Page(s): 2196 - 2205
Date of Publication: 22 November 2016

ISSN Information:

PubMed ID: 27893378

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