Comparison of SFS and mRMR for oximetry feature selection in obstructive sleep apnea detection

SpO2 Feature section 03 medical and health sciences 0302 clinical medicine SFS 3314 Tecnología médica mRMR Sleep apnea Classification
DOI: 10.1007/s00521-018-3455-8 Publication Date: 2018-04-04T07:55:53Z
ABSTRACT
5,606<br/>Q1<br/>0,713<br/>Obstructive sleep apnea is a disorder characterized by pauses in respiration during sleep. Due to this disturbance in breathing, there is a decrease in the oxygen saturation (SpO2) level. Thus, SpO2 can be used as a source of information for the automatic detection of apnea. Several solutions exist in the literature where different features are used. To find a better discriminant capacity, a subset of few features that obtains higher accuracy with the proper classifier is needed. To face this challenge, this work compares two different feature selection methods. The first one is a filter method named minimum redundancy maximum relevance, and the other one is called sequential forward search. These methods are tested with different classifiers. Two public datasets with 8 and 25 subjects are used to test and compare the performances of the different feature selection methods. A set of features for each classifier is obtained, and the results are compared with the previous work. The results found in this work show a good performance with respect to the state of the art and present a good option for apnea screening with low resources.<br/>SCIE<br/>
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