Sensors (Aug 2022)

Selecting the Most Important Features for Predicting Mild Cognitive Impairment from Thai Verbal Fluency Assessments

  • Suppat Metarugcheep,
  • Proadpran Punyabukkana,
  • Dittaya Wanvarie,
  • Solaphat Hemrungrojn,
  • Chaipat Chunharas,
  • Ploy N. Pratanwanich

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/s22155813
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 22, no. 15
p. 5813

Abstract

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Mild cognitive impairment (MCI) is an early stage of cognitive decline or memory loss, commonly found among the elderly. A phonemic verbal fluency (PVF) task is a standard cognitive test that participants are asked to produce words starting with given letters, such as “F” in English and “ก” /k/ in Thai. With state-of-the-art machine learning techniques, features extracted from the PVF data have been widely used to detect MCI. The PVF features, including acoustic features, semantic features, and word grouping, have been studied in many languages but not Thai. However, applying the same PVF feature extraction methods used in English to Thai yields unpleasant results due to different language characteristics. This study performs analytical feature extraction on Thai PVF data to classify MCI patients. In particular, we propose novel approaches to extract features based on phonemic clustering (ability to cluster words by phonemes) and switching (ability to shift between clusters) for the Thai PVF data. The comparison results of the three classifiers revealed that the support vector machine performed the best with an area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC) of 0.733 (N = 100). Furthermore, our implemented guidelines extracted efficient features, which support the machine learning models regarding MCI detection on Thai PVF data.

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