Patient admission prediction using a pruned fuzzy min-max neural network with rule extraction
- Authors: Wang, Jin , Lim, Cheepeng , Creighton, Douglas , Khorsavi, Abbas , Nahavandi, Saeid , Ugon, Julien , Vamplew, Peter , Stranieri, Andrew , Martin, Laura , Freischmidt, Anton
- Date: 2015
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: Neural Computing and Applications Vol. 26, no. 2 (2015), p. 277-289
- Full Text: false
- Reviewed:
- Description: A useful patient admission prediction model that helps the emergency department of a hospital admit patients efficiently is of great importance. It not only improves the care quality provided by the emergency department but also reduces waiting time of patients. This paper proposes an automatic prediction method for patient admission based on a fuzzy min–max neural network (FMM) with rules extraction. The FMM neural network forms a set of hyperboxes by learning through data samples, and the learned knowledge is used for prediction. In addition to providing predictions, decision rules are extracted from the FMM hyperboxes to provide an explanation for each prediction. In order to simplify the structure of FMM and the decision rules, an optimization method that simultaneously maximizes prediction accuracy and minimizes the number of FMM hyperboxes is proposed. Specifically, a genetic algorithm is formulated to find the optimal configuration of the decision rules. The experimental results using a large data set consisting of 450740 real patient records reveal that the proposed method achieves comparable or even better prediction accuracy than state-of-the-art classifiers with the additional ability to extract a set of explanatory rules to justify its predictions.
Automatic sleep stage identification: difficulties and possible solutions
- Authors: Sukhorukova, Nadezda , Stranieri, Andrew , Ofoghi, Bahadorreza , Vamplew, Peter , Saleem, Muhammad Saad , Ma, Liping , Ugon, Adrien , Ugon, Julien , Muecke, Nial , Amiel, Hélène , Philippe, Carole , Bani-Mustafa, Ahmed , Huda, Shamsul , Bertoli, Marcello , Levy, P , Ganascia, J.G
- Date: 2010
- Type: Text , Conference proceedings
- Full Text:
- Description: The diagnosis of many sleep disorders is a labour intensive task that involves the specialised interpretation of numerous signals including brain wave, breath and heart rate captured in overnight polysomnogram sessions. The automation of diagnoses is challenging for data mining algorithms because the data sets are extremely large and noisy, the signals are complex and specialist's analyses vary. This work reports on the adaptation of approaches from four fields; neural networks, mathematical optimisation, financial forecasting and frequency domain analysis to the problem of automatically determing a patient's stage of sleep. Results, though preliminary, are promising and indicate that combined approaches may prove more fruitful than the reliance on a approach.