Title :
Analysis and classification of swallowing sounds using reconstructed phase space features
Author :
Aboofazeli, Mohammad ; Moussavi, Zahra
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Manitoba Univ., Winnipeg, Man., Canada
Abstract :
The paper presents a quantitative analysis of swallowing sounds in normal and dysphagic subjects based on nonlinear dynamics metric tools. In addition, an automated method is proposed to identify patients at risk of dysphagia. Multidimensional phase space representation of the swallowing sound was reconstructed using Takens method of delays. Rosenstein and false nearest neighbor (FNN) methods were employed to evaluate the optimum time delay and proper embedding dimension, respectively. A Grassberger-Procaccia algorithm was utilized to calculate the correlation dimension as a measure of the complexity of the reconstructed attractor. The analysis demonstrated the low-dimensional dynamic characteristics of normal and dysphagic swallowing sounds. The optimum time delay and correlation dimension of the opening and transmission phases of swallowing sounds were used as features for a 3-nearest neighbor classifier to identify individuals at risk of dysphagia. The method was applied to tracheal sound recordings of 15 healthy subjects and 11 patients with some degree of dysphagia. The algorithm was able to classify 83% of swallows correctly. Finally, a screening algorithm was used which correctly classified 24 out of 26 subjects. This study suggests that nonlinear analysis is a promising tool for quantitative analysis of swallowing sounds and swallowing disorders.
Keywords :
acoustic signal processing; delays; medical signal processing; patient diagnosis; phase space methods; signal reconstruction; signal representation; Grassberger-Procaccia algorithm; Rosenstein method; Takens method of delays; correlation dimension; dysphagia; false nearest neighbor method; low-dimensional dynamic characteristics; multidimensional phase space representation; nonlinear analysis; nonlinear dynamics metric tools; optimum time delay; phase space feature reconstruction; swallowing sound analysis; swallowing sound classification; tracheal sound recordings; Aerodynamics; Chaos; Delay effects; Extraterrestrial measurements; Gold; Medical conditions; Multidimensional systems; Nearest neighbor searches; Signal analysis; Time series analysis;
Conference_Titel :
Acoustics, Speech, and Signal Processing, 2005. Proceedings. (ICASSP '05). IEEE International Conference on
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-8874-7
DOI :
10.1109/ICASSP.2005.1416330