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A self-training automatic infant-cry detector.

Authors :
Coro, Gianpaolo
Bardelli, Serena
Cuttano, Armando
Scaramuzzo, Rosa T.
Ciantelli, Massimiliano
Source :
Neural Computing & Applications. Apr2023, Vol. 35 Issue 11, p8543-8559. 17p.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Infant cry is one of the first distinctive and informative life signals observed after birth. Neonatologists and automatic assistive systems can analyse infant cry to early-detect pathologies. These analyses extensively use reference expert-curated databases containing annotated infant-cry audio samples. However, these databases are not publicly accessible because of their sensitive data. Moreover, the recorded data can under-represent specific phenomena or the operational conditions required by other medical teams. Additionally, building these databases requires significant investments that few hospitals can afford. This paper describes an open-source workflow for infant-cry detection, which identifies audio segments containing high-quality infant-cry samples with no other overlapping audio events (e.g. machine noise or adult speech). It requires minimal training because it trains an LSTM-with-self-attention model on infant-cry samples automatically detected from the recorded audio through cluster analysis and HMM classification. The audio signal processing uses energy and intonation acoustic features from 100-ms segments to improve spectral robustness to noise. The workflow annotates the input audio with intervals containing infant-cry samples suited for populating a database for neonatological and early diagnosis studies. On 16 min of hospital phone-audio recordings, it reached sufficient infant-cry detection accuracy in 3 neonatal care environments (nursery—69%, sub-intensive—82%, intensive—77%) involving 20 infants subject to heterogeneous cry stimuli, and had substantial agreement with an expert's annotation. Our workflow is a cost-effective solution, particularly suited for a sub-intensive care environment, scalable to monitor from one to many infants. It allows a hospital to build and populate an extensive high-quality infant-cry database with a minimal investment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09410643
Volume :
35
Issue :
11
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Neural Computing & Applications
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
162587446
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00521-022-08129-w