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2. Machine Learning Analysis for Quantitative Discrimination of Dried Blood Droplets
- Author
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Michael A. Johnson, Martin Bencsik, Lama Hamadeh, David J. Fairhurst, Samia Imran, and Graham R. Sharpe
- Subjects
Male ,Science ,lcsh:Medicine ,Image processing ,02 engineering and technology ,010402 general chemistry ,Machine learning ,computer.software_genre ,01 natural sciences ,Article ,Machine Learning ,Young Adult ,Image Processing, Computer-Assisted ,Humans ,lcsh:Science ,Exercise ,Data mining ,Mathematics ,Dried Blood Spot Testing ,Principal Component Analysis ,Multidisciplinary ,business.industry ,Supervised learning ,Statistics ,lcsh:R ,Discriminant Analysis ,Statistical model ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Linear discriminant analysis ,0104 chemical sciences ,Design, synthesis and processing ,Blood chemistry ,Principal component analysis ,Unsupervised learning ,Medicine ,lcsh:Q ,Artificial intelligence ,0210 nano-technology ,business ,computer ,Algorithms ,Blood Chemical Analysis - Abstract
One of the most interesting and everyday natural phenomenon is the formation of different patterns after the evaporation of liquid droplets on a solid surface. The analysis of dried patterns from blood droplets has recently gained a lot of attention, experimentally and theoretically, due to its potential application in diagnostic medicine and forensic science. This paper presents evidence that images of dried blood droplets have a signature revealing the exhaustion level of the person, and discloses an entirely novel approach to studying human dried blood droplet patterns. We took blood samples from 30 healthy young male volunteers before and after exhaustive exercise, which is well known to cause large changes to blood chemistry. We objectively and quantitatively analysed 1800 images of dried blood droplets, developing sophisticated image processing analysis routines and optimising a multivariate statistical machine learning algorithm. We looked for statistically relevant correlations between the patterns in the dried blood droplets and exercise-induced changes in blood chemistry. An analysis of the various measured physiological parameters was also investigated. We found that when our machine learning algorithm, which optimises a statistical model combining Principal Component Analysis (PCA) as an unsupervised learning method and Linear Discriminant Analysis (LDA) as a supervised learning method, is applied on the logarithmic power spectrum of the images, it can provide up to 95% prediction accuracy, in discriminating the physiological conditions, i.e., before or after physical exercise. This correlation is strongest when all ten images taken per volunteer per condition are averaged, rather than treated individually. Having demonstrated proof-of-principle, this method can be applied to identify diseases.
- Published
- 2020
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