Sensors (Feb 2021)

Monophonic and Polyphonic Wheezing Classification Based on Constrained Low-Rank Non-Negative Matrix Factorization

  • Juan De La Torre Cruz,
  • Francisco Jesús Cañadas Quesada,
  • Nicolás Ruiz Reyes,
  • Sebastián García Galán,
  • Julio José Carabias Orti,
  • Gerardo Peréz Chica

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/s21051661
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 21, no. 5
p. 1661

Abstract

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The appearance of wheezing sounds is widely considered by physicians as a key indicator to detect early pulmonary disorders or even the severity associated with respiratory diseases, as occurs in the case of asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. From a physician’s point of view, monophonic and polyphonic wheezing classification is still a challenging topic in biomedical signal processing since both types of wheezes are sinusoidal in nature. Unlike most of the classification algorithms in which interference caused by normal respiratory sounds is not addressed in depth, our first contribution proposes a novel Constrained Low-Rank Non-negative Matrix Factorization (CL-RNMF) approach, never applied to classification of wheezing as far as the authors’ knowledge, which incorporates several constraints (sparseness and smoothness) and a low-rank configuration to extract the wheezing spectral content, minimizing the acoustic interference from normal respiratory sounds. The second contribution automatically analyzes the harmonic structure of the energy distribution associated with the estimated wheezing spectrogram to classify the type of wheezing. Experimental results report that: (i) the proposed method outperforms the most recent and relevant state-of-the-art wheezing classification method by approximately 8% in accuracy; (ii) unlike state-of-the-art methods based on classifiers, the proposed method uses an unsupervised approach that does not require any training.

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