Literature DB >> 34973584

Self-supervised representation learning from 12-lead ECG data.

Temesgen Mehari1, Nils Strodthoff2.   

Abstract

Clinical 12-lead electrocardiography (ECG) is one of the most widely encountered kinds of biosignals. Despite the increased availability of public ECG datasets, label scarcity remains a central challenge in the field. Self-supervised learning represents a promising way to alleviate this issue. This would allow to train more powerful models given the same amount of labeled data and to incorporate or improve predictions about rare diseases, for which training datasets are inherently limited. In this work, we put forward the first comprehensive assessment of self-supervised representation learning from clinical 12-lead ECG data. To this end, we adapt state-of-the-art self-supervised methods based on instance discrimination and latent forecasting to the ECG domain. In a first step, we learn contrastive representations and evaluate their quality based on linear evaluation performance on a recently established, comprehensive, clinical ECG classification task. In a second step, we analyze the impact of self-supervised pretraining on finetuned ECG classifiers as compared to purely supervised performance. For the best-performing method, an adaptation of contrastive predictive coding, we find a linear evaluation performance only 0.5% below supervised performance. For the finetuned models, we find improvements in downstream performance of roughly 1% compared to supervised performance, label efficiency, as well as robustness against physiological noise. This work clearly establishes the feasibility of extracting discriminative representations from ECG data via self-supervised learning and the numerous advantages when finetuning such representations on downstream tasks as compared to purely supervised training. As first comprehensive assessment of its kind in the ECG domain carried out exclusively on publicly available datasets, we hope to establish a first step towards reproducible progress in the rapidly evolving field of representation learning for biosignals.
Copyright © 2021 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Deep neural networks; Electrocardiography; Self-supervised learning; Time series analysis; Unsupervised learning

Mesh:

Year:  2021        PMID: 34973584     DOI: 10.1016/j.compbiomed.2021.105114

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Comput Biol Med        ISSN: 0010-4825            Impact factor:   4.589


  3 in total

1.  Contrastive Self-Supervised Learning for Stress Detection from ECG Data.

Authors:  Suha Rabbani; Naimul Khan
Journal:  Bioengineering (Basel)       Date:  2022-08-08

Review 2.  State-of-the-Art Deep Learning Methods on Electrocardiogram Data: Systematic Review.

Authors:  Georgios Petmezas; Leandros Stefanopoulos; Vassilis Kilintzis; Andreas Tzavelis; John A Rogers; Aggelos K Katsaggelos; Nicos Maglaveras
Journal:  JMIR Med Inform       Date:  2022-08-15

3.  Developing Graph Convolutional Networks and Mutual Information for Arrhythmic Diagnosis Based on Multichannel ECG Signals.

Authors:  Bahare Andayeshgar; Fardin Abdali-Mohammadi; Majid Sepahvand; Alireza Daneshkhah; Afshin Almasi; Nader Salari
Journal:  Int J Environ Res Public Health       Date:  2022-08-28       Impact factor: 4.614

  3 in total

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