Abstract

Alzheimer’s Disease (AD) is the leading cause of dementia, a broad term encompassing memory loss and other cognitive impairments. Although there is no known cure for dementia, managing specific symptoms associated with it can be effective. Mild dementia stages, including AD, can be treated, and computer-based techniques have been developed to aid in early diagnosis. This paper presents a new workflow called Borderline-DEMNET, designed to classify various stages of Alzheimer’s/dementia with more than three classes. Borderline-SMOTE is employed to address the issue of imbalanced datasets. A comparison is made between the proposed Borderline-DEMNET workflow and the existing DEMNET model, which focuses on classifying different dementia and AD stages. The evaluation metrics specified in the paper are used to assess the results. The framework is trained, tested, and validated using the Kaggle dataset, while the robustness of the work is checked using the ADNI dataset. The proposed workflow achieves an accuracy of 99.17% for the Kaggle dataset and 99.14% for the ADNI dataset. In conclusion, the proposed workflow outperforms previously identified models, particularly in terms of accuracy. It also proves that selecting a proper class balancing technique will increase accuracy.

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