1. On Automatic Diagnosis of Alzheimer’s Disease Based on Spontaneous Speech Analysis and Emotional Temperature
- Author
-
Marcos Faundez-Zanuy, Harkaitz Eguiraun, Mirian Ecay-Torres, Jordi Solé-Casals, Patricia Henríquez, Jesús B. Alonso, Nora Barroso, Pablo Martinez-Lage, Karmele López-de-Ipiña, Carlos M. Travieso, Universitat de Vic. Escola Politècnica Superior, and Universitat de Vic. Grup de Recerca en Tecnologies Digitals
- Subjects
Postmortem studies ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Research areas ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Feature selection ,Brain tissue ,Disease ,Computer Science Applications ,Developmental psychology ,Alzheimer, Malaltia d' ,Physical medicine and rehabilitation ,medicine ,Processament de la parla ,Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition ,Degenerative dementia ,Emotion recognition ,Psychology ,Spontaneous speech - Abstract
Alzheimer's disease is the most prevalent form of progressive degenerative dementia; it has a high socio-economic impact in Western countries. Therefore it is one of the most active research areas today. Alzheimer's is sometimes diagnosed by excluding other dementias, and definitive confirmation is only obtained through a post-mortem study of the brain tissue of the patient. The work presented here is part of a larger study that aims to identify novel technologies and biomarkers for early Alzheimer's disease detection, and it focuses on evaluating the suitability of a new approach for early diagnosis of Alzheimer’s disease by non-invasive methods. The purpose is to examine, in a pilot study, the potential of applying Machine Learning algorithms to speech features obtained from suspected Alzheimer sufferers in order help diagnose this disease and determine its degree of severity. Two human capabilities relevant in communication have been analyzed for feature selection: Spontaneous Speech and Emotional Response. The experimental results obtained were very satisfactory and promising for the early diagnosis and classification of Alzheimer’s disease patients.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF