In IEEE International Conference on Healthcare Informatics. IEEE International Conference on Healthcare Informatics
Dementia is one of the major health challenges in aging populations, with 50 million people diagnosed worldwide. However, dementia is often underdiagnosed or delayed resulting in missed opportunities for appropriate care plans. Identifying early signs of dementia is essential for better life quality of aging populations. Monitoring early signs of individual health changes could help clinicians diagnose dementia in its early stages with more effective treatment plans. However, rare data for dementia cases compared to the normal (i.e., imbalance class distribution) make it challenging to develop robust supervised learning models. In order to alleviate this issue, we investigated one-class classification (OCC) techniques, which use only majority class (i.e., normal cases) in model development to detect dementia signals from older adult clinical visits. The OCC models identify abnormality of older adults' longitudinal health conditions to predict incident dementia. The predictive performance of the OCC was compared with a recent streaming clustering-based technique and demonstrated higher predictive power. Our analysis showed that OCC has a promising potential to increase power in predicting dementia.
Ibrahim Omar A, Fu Sunyang, Vassilaki Maria, Mielke Michelle M, St Sauver Jennifer, Petersen Ronald C, Sohn Sunghwan
2022-Jun
Dementia, deep learning, machine learning, one-class classification, outlier detection