Parkinson’s disease identification using restricted Boltzmann machines

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Abstract

Currently, Parkinson’s Disease (PD) has no cure or accurate diagnosis, reaching approximately 60,000 new cases yearly and worldwide, being more often in the elderly population. Its main symptoms can not be easily uncorrelated with other illness, being way more difficult to be identified at the early stages. As such, computer-aided tools have been recently used to assist in this task, but the challenge in the automatic identification of Parkinson’s Disease still persists. In order to cope with this problem, we propose to employ Restricted Boltzmann Machines (RBMs) to learn features in an unsupervised fashion by analyzing images from handwriting exams, which aim at assessing the writing skills of potential individuals. These are one of the main symptoms of PD-prone people, since such kind of ability ends up being severely affected. We show that RBMs can learn proper features that help supervised classifiers in the task of automatic identification of PD patients, as well as one can obtain a more compact representation of the exam for the sake of storage and computational load purposes.

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APA

Pereira, C. R., Passos, L. A., Lopes, R. R., Weber, S. A. T., Hook, C., & Papa, J. P. (2017). Parkinson’s disease identification using restricted Boltzmann machines. In Lecture Notes in Computer Science (including subseries Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence and Lecture Notes in Bioinformatics) (Vol. 10425 LNCS, pp. 70–80). Springer Verlag. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-64698-5_7

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