RESUMEN
Diabetes is a disease that has to be managed through appropriate lifestyle. Technology can help with this, particularly when it is designed so that it does not impose an additional burden on the patient. This paper presents an approach that combines machine-learning and symbolic reasoning to recognise high-level lifestyle activities using sensor data obtained primarily from the patient's smartphone. We compare five methods for machine-learning which differ in the amount of manually labelled data by the user, to investigate the trade-off between the labelling effort and recognition accuracy. In an evaluation on real-life data, the highest accuracy of 83.4 % was achieved by the MCAT method, which is capable of gradually adapting to each user.
Asunto(s)
Acelerometría/instrumentación , Diabetes Mellitus/fisiopatología , Aprendizaje Automático , Monitoreo Ambulatorio/métodos , Actividad Motora/fisiología , Teléfono Inteligente , Algoritmos , Electrocardiografía , Sistemas de Información Geográfica , HumanosRESUMEN
We develop an automated image processing system for detecting microaneurysm (MA) in diabetic patients. Diabetic retinopathy is one of the main causes of preventable blindness in working age diabetic people with the presence of an MA being one of the first signs. We transform the eye fundus images to the L*a*b* color space in order to separately process the L* and a* channels, looking for MAs in each of them. We then fuse the results, and last send the MA candidates to a k-nearest neighbors classifier for final assessment. The performance of the method, measured against 50 images with an ophthalmologist's hand-drawn ground-truth, shows high sensitivity (100%) and accuracy (84%), and running times around 10 s. This kind of automatic image processing application is important in order to reduce the burden on the public health system associated with the diagnosis of diabetic retinopathy given the high number of potential patients that need periodic screening.