Supported Diagnosis of Attention Deficit and Hyperactivity Disorder from EEG Based on Interpretable Kernels for Hidden Markov Models

Author(s):  
M. C. Maya-Piedrahita ◽  
P. M. Herrera-Gomez ◽  
L. Berrío-Mesa ◽  
D. A. Cárdenas-Peña ◽  
A. A. Orozco-Gutierrez

As a neurodevelopmental pathology, Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) mainly arises during childhood. Persistent patterns of generalized inattention, impulsivity, or hyperactivity characterize ADHD that may persist into adulthood. The conventional diagnosis relies on clinical observational processes yielding high rates of overdiagnosis due to varying interpretations among specialists or missing information. Although several studies have designed objective behavioral features to overcome such an issue, they lack significance. Despite electroencephalography (EEG) analyses extracting alternative biomarkers using signal processing techniques, the nonlinearity and nonstationarity of EEG signals restrain performance and generalization of hand-crafted features. This work proposes a methodology to support ADHD diagnosis by characterizing EEG signals from hidden Markov models (HMM), classifying subjects based on similarity measures for probability functions, and spatially interpreting the results using graphic embeddings of stochastic dynamic models. The methodology learns a single HMM for EEG signal from each patient, so favoring the inter-subject variability. Then, the Probability Product Kernel, specifically developed for assessing the similarity between HMMs, fed a support vector machine that classifies subjects according to their stochastic dynamics. Lastly, the kernel variant of Principal Component Analysis provided a means to visualize the EEG transitions in a two-dimensional space, evidencing dynamic differences between ADHD and Healthy Control children. From the electrophysiological perspective, we recorded EEG under the Stop Signal Task modified with reward levels, which considers cognitive features of interest as insufficient motivational circuits recruitment. The methodology compares the supported diagnosis in two EEG channel setups (whole channel set and channels of interest in frontocentral area) and four frequency bands (Theta, Alpha, Beta rhythms, and a wideband). Results evidence an accuracy rate of 97.0% in the Beta band and in the channels where previous works found error-related negativity events. Such accuracy rate strongly supports the dual pathway hypothesis and motivational deficit concerning the pathophysiology of ADHD. It also demonstrates the utility of joining inhibitory and motivational paradigms with dynamic EEG analysis into a noninvasive and affordable diagnostic tool for ADHD patients.

2010 ◽  
Vol 20 (1) ◽  
pp. 45-60
Author(s):  
E. El-madbouly ◽  
T. Al-ani ◽  
S. Helmy ◽  
Y. Hamam ◽  
A.A. Nasser

2020 ◽  
Vol 29 (11) ◽  
pp. 3409-3423
Author(s):  
Akash Gupta ◽  
Tieming Liu ◽  
Christopher Crick

Continuous mortality risk monitoring is instrumental to manage a patient’s care and to efficiently utilize the limited hospital resources. Due to incompleteness and irregularities of electronic health records (EHR), developing continuous mortality risk prediction using EHR data is a challenge. In this study, we propose a framework to continuously monitor mortality risk, and apply it to the real-world EHR data. The proposed method employs hidden Markov models (temporal technique) that take account of both the previous state of patient’s health and the current value of clinical signs. Following the Sepsis-3 definition, we selected 3898 encounters of patients with suspected infection to compare the performance of temporal and non-temporal methods (Decision Tree (DT), Logistic Regression (LR), Naive Bayes (NB), Random Forest (RF), and Support Vector Machine (SVM)). The area under receiver operating characteristics (AUROC) curve, sensitivity, specificity and G-mean were used as performance measures. On the selected data, the AUROC of the proposed temporal framework (0.87) is 9–12% greater than the nontemporal methods (DT: 0.78, NB: 0.79, SVM: 0.79, LR: 0.80 and RF: 0.80). The results also show that our model (G-mean=0.78) provides a better balance between sensitivity and specificity compared to clinically acceptable bed-side criteria (G-mean=0.71). The proposed framework leverages the longitudinal data available in EHR and performs better than the non-temporal methods. The proposed method facilitates information related to the time of change of the patient’s health that may help practitioners to plan early and develop effective treatment strategies.


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