학술논문

Global ECG Classification by Self-Operational Neural Networks With Feature Injection
Document Type
Periodical
Source
IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering IEEE Trans. Biomed. Eng. Biomedical Engineering, IEEE Transactions on. 70(1):205-215 Jan, 2023
Subject
Bioengineering
Computing and Processing
Components, Circuits, Devices and Systems
Communication, Networking and Broadcast Technologies
Electrocardiography
Feature extraction
Neurons
Training
Discrete wavelet transforms
Heart beat
Task analysis
Inter-patient ECG classification
operational neural networks
real-time heart monitoring
generative neurons
Language
ISSN
0018-9294
1558-2531
Abstract
Objective: Global (inter-patient) ECG classification for arrhythmia detection over Electrocardiogram (ECG) signal is a challenging task for both humans and machines. Automating this process with utmost accuracy is, therefore, highly desirable due to the advent of wearable ECG sensors. However, even with numerous deep learning approaches proposed recently, there is still a notable gap in the performance of global and patient-specific ECG classification performance. Methods: In this study, we propose a novel approach for inter-patient ECG classification using a compact 1D Self-ONN by exploiting morphological and timing information in heart cycles. We used 1D Self-ONN layers to automatically learn morphological representations from ECG data, enabling us to capture the shape of the ECG waveform around the R peaks. We further inject temporal features based on RR interval for timing characterization. The classification layers can thus benefit from both temporal and learned features for the final arrhythmia classification. Results: Using the MIT-BIH arrhythmia benchmark database, the proposed method achieves the highest classification performance ever achieved, i.e., 99.21% precision, 99.10% recall, and 99.15% F1-score for normal (N) segments; 82.19% precision, 82.50% recall, and 82.34% F1-score for the supra-ventricular ectopic beat (SVEBs); and finally, 94.41% precision, 96.10% recall, and 95.2% F1-score for the ventricular-ectopic beats (VEBs). Significance: As a pioneer application, the results show that compact and shallow 1D Self-ONNs with the feature injection can surpass all state-of-the-art deep models with a significant margin and with minimal computational complexity. Conclusion: This study has demonstrated that using a compact and superior network model, a global ECG classification can still be achieved with an elegant performance level even when no patient-specific information is used.