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Alzheimer’s Disease and Frontotemporal Dementia: A Robust Classification Method of EEG Signals and a Comparison of Validation Methods
- Source :
- Diagnostics, Volume 11, Issue 8, Diagnostics, Vol 11, Iss 1437, p 1437 (2021)
- Publication Year :
- 2021
- Publisher :
- MDPI AG, 2021.
-
Abstract
- Dementia is the clinical syndrome characterized by progressive loss of cognitive and emotional abilities to a degree severe enough to interfere with daily functioning. Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is the most common neurogenerative disorder, making up 50–70% of total dementia cases. Another dementia type is frontotemporal dementia (FTD), which is associated with circumscribed degeneration of the prefrontal and anterior temporal cortex and mainly affects personality and social skills. With the rapid advancement in electroencephalogram (EEG) sensors, the EEG has become a suitable, accurate, and highly sensitive biomarker for the identification of neuronal and cognitive dynamics in most cases of dementia, such as AD and FTD, through EEG signal analysis and processing techniques. In this study, six supervised machine-learning techniques were compared on categorizing processed EEG signals of AD and FTD cases, to provide an insight for future methods on early dementia diagnosis. K-fold cross validation and leave-one-patient-out cross validation were also compared as validation methods to evaluate their performance for this classification problem. The proposed methodology accuracy scores were 78.5% for AD detection with decision trees and 86.3% for FTD detection with random forests.
- Subjects :
- Medicine (General)
medicine.medical_specialty
Clinical Biochemistry
Electroencephalography
Audiology
frontotemporal dementia
Article
Cross-validation
R5-920
mental disorders
medicine
Dementia
EEG
Temporal cortex
medicine.diagnostic_test
business.industry
Cognition
electroencephalogram
medicine.disease
Random forest
classification
k-fold
Biomarker (medicine)
leave-one-patient-out
business
Alzheimer’s disease
dementia
Frontotemporal dementia
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 20754418
- Volume :
- 11
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Diagnostics
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....0fc6b831050cfee837cde574f85a34ed