Alex Pui-Wai Lee

2papers

2 Papers

SYJul 11, 2022
Towards Personalized Healthcare in Cardiac Population: The Development of a Wearable ECG Monitoring System, an ECG Lossy Compression Schema, and a ResNet-Based AF Detector

Wei-Ying Yi, Peng-Fei Liu, Sheung-Lai Lo et al.

Cardiovascular diseases (CVDs) are the number one cause of death worldwide. While there is growing evidence that the atrial fibrillation (AF) has strong associations with various CVDs, this heart arrhythmia is usually diagnosed using electrocardiography (ECG) which is a risk-free, non-intrusive, and cost-efficient tool. Continuously and remotely monitoring the subjects' ECG information unlocks the potentials of prompt pre-diagnosis and timely pre-treatment of AF before the development of any life-threatening conditions/diseases. Ultimately, the CVDs associated mortality could be reduced. In this manuscript, the design and implementation of a personalized healthcare system embodying a wearable ECG device, a mobile application, and a back-end server are presented. This system continuously monitors the users' ECG information to provide personalized health warnings/feedbacks. The users are able to communicate with their paired health advisors through this system for remote diagnoses, interventions, etc. The implemented wearable ECG devices have been evaluated and showed excellent intra-consistency (CVRMS=5.5%), acceptable inter-consistency (CVRMS=12.1%), and negligible RR-interval errors (ARE<1.4%). To boost the battery life of the wearable devices, a lossy compression schema utilizing the quasi-periodic feature of ECG signals to achieve compression was proposed. Compared to the recognized schemata, it outperformed the others in terms of compression efficiency and distortion, and achieved at least 2x of CR at a certain PRD or RMSE for ECG signals from the MIT-BIH database. To enable automated AF diagnosis/screening in the proposed system, a ResNet-based AF detector was developed. For the ECG records from the 2017 PhysioNet CinC challenge, this AF detector obtained an average testing F1=85.10% and a best testing F1=87.31%, outperforming the state-of-the-art.

CVMay 21, 2021
DSR: Direct Simultaneous Registration for Multiple 3D Images

Zhehua Mao, Liang Zhao, Shoudong Huang et al.

This paper presents a novel algorithm named Direct Simultaneous Registration (DSR) that registers a collection of 3D images in a simultaneous fashion without specifying any reference image, feature extraction and matching, or information loss or reuse. The algorithm optimizes the global poses of local image frames by maximizing the similarity between a predefined panoramic image and local images. Although we formulate the problem as a Direct Bundle Adjustment (DBA) that jointly optimizes the poses of local frames and the intensities of the panoramic image, by investigating the independence of pose estimation from the panoramic image in the solving process, DSR is proposed to solve the poses only and proved to be able to obtain the same optimal poses as DBA. The proposed method is particularly suitable for the scenarios where distinct features are not available, such as Transesophageal Echocardiography (TEE) images. DSR is evaluated by comparing it with four widely used methods via simulated and in-vivo 3D TEE images. It is shown that the proposed method outperforms these four methods in terms of accuracy and requires much fewer computational resources than the state-of-the-art accumulated pairwise estimates (APE).