TY - JOUR
T1 - Heart Sound Abnormality Detection From Multi-Institutional Collaboration
T2 - Introducing a Federated Learning Framework
AU - Qiu, Wanyong
AU - Quan, Chen
AU - Zhu, Lixian
AU - Yu, Yongzi
AU - Wang, Zhihua
AU - Ma, Yu
AU - Sun, Mengkai
AU - Chang, Yi
AU - Qian, Kun
AU - Hu, Bin
AU - Yamamoto, Yoshiharu
AU - Schuller, Bjorn W.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 IEEE.
PY - 2024
Y1 - 2024
N2 - Objective: Early diagnosis of cardiovascular diseases is a crucial task in medical practice. With the application of computer audition in the healthcare field, artificial intelligence (AI) has been applied to clinical non-invasive intelligent auscultation of heart sounds to provide rapid and effective pre-screening. However, AI models generally require large amounts of data which may cause privacy issues. Unfortunately, it is difficult to collect large amounts of healthcare data from a single centre. Methods: In this study, we propose federated learning (FL) optimisation strategies for the practical application in multi-centre institutional heart sound databases. The horizontal FL is mainly employed to tackle the privacy problem by aligning the feature spaces of FL participating institutions without information leakage. In addition, techniques based on deep learning have poor interpretability due to their 'black-box' property, which limits the feasibility of AI in real medical data. To this end, vertical FL is utilised to address the issues of model interpretability and data scarcity. Conclusion: Experimental results demonstrate that, the proposed FL framework can achieve good performance for heart sound abnormality detection by taking the personal privacy protection into account. Moreover, using the federated feature space is beneficial to balance the interpretability of the vertical FL and the privacy of the data. Significance: This work realises the potential of FL from research to clinical practice, and is expected to have extensive application in the federated smart medical system.
AB - Objective: Early diagnosis of cardiovascular diseases is a crucial task in medical practice. With the application of computer audition in the healthcare field, artificial intelligence (AI) has been applied to clinical non-invasive intelligent auscultation of heart sounds to provide rapid and effective pre-screening. However, AI models generally require large amounts of data which may cause privacy issues. Unfortunately, it is difficult to collect large amounts of healthcare data from a single centre. Methods: In this study, we propose federated learning (FL) optimisation strategies for the practical application in multi-centre institutional heart sound databases. The horizontal FL is mainly employed to tackle the privacy problem by aligning the feature spaces of FL participating institutions without information leakage. In addition, techniques based on deep learning have poor interpretability due to their 'black-box' property, which limits the feasibility of AI in real medical data. To this end, vertical FL is utilised to address the issues of model interpretability and data scarcity. Conclusion: Experimental results demonstrate that, the proposed FL framework can achieve good performance for heart sound abnormality detection by taking the personal privacy protection into account. Moreover, using the federated feature space is beneficial to balance the interpretability of the vertical FL and the privacy of the data. Significance: This work realises the potential of FL from research to clinical practice, and is expected to have extensive application in the federated smart medical system.
KW - Computer audition
KW - federated learning
KW - healthcare
KW - heart sound
KW - information security
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85192177218&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1109/TBME.2024.3393557
DO - 10.1109/TBME.2024.3393557
M3 - Article
C2 - 38700959
AN - SCOPUS:85192177218
SN - 0018-9294
VL - 71
SP - 2802
EP - 2813
JO - IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering
JF - IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering
IS - 10
ER -