Multimodal Inductive Transfer Learning for Detection of Alzheimer's Dementia and its Severity
This addresses the need for scalable and cost-effective Alzheimer's detection methods, with potential impact on healthcare systems and patients, though it appears incremental as it builds on existing multimodal approaches.
The paper tackles Alzheimer's dementia detection and severity estimation using a multimodal ensemble system with acoustic, cognitive, and linguistic features, achieving state-of-the-art results including 83.3% accuracy for classification and 4.60 RMSE for regression on a benchmark dataset.
Alzheimer's disease is estimated to affect around 50 million people worldwide and is rising rapidly, with a global economic burden of nearly a trillion dollars. This calls for scalable, cost-effective, and robust methods for detection of Alzheimer's dementia (AD). We present a novel architecture that leverages acoustic, cognitive, and linguistic features to form a multimodal ensemble system. It uses specialized artificial neural networks with temporal characteristics to detect AD and its severity, which is reflected through Mini-Mental State Exam (MMSE) scores. We first evaluate it on the ADReSS challenge dataset, which is a subject-independent and balanced dataset matched for age and gender to mitigate biases, and is available through DementiaBank. Our system achieves state-of-the-art test accuracy, precision, recall, and F1-score of 83.3% each for AD classification, and state-of-the-art test root mean squared error (RMSE) of 4.60 for MMSE score regression. To the best of our knowledge, the system further achieves state-of-the-art AD classification accuracy of 88.0% when evaluated on the full benchmark DementiaBank Pitt database. Our work highlights the applicability and transferability of spontaneous speech to produce a robust inductive transfer learning model, and demonstrates generalizability through a task-agnostic feature-space. The source code is available at https://github.com/wazeerzulfikar/alzheimers-dementia