Abstract

Parkinson’s disease is a serious neurological impair-ment which adversely affects the quality of life in individuals. While there currently does not exist any cure for this disease, it is well known that early diagnosis can be used to improve the quality of life of affected individuals through various types of therapy. Speech based screening of Parkinson’s disease is an active area of research intending to offer a non-invasive and passive tool for clinicians to monitor changes in voice that arise due to Parkinson’s disease. Whereas traditional methods for speech based identification rely on domain-knowledge based hand-crafted features, in this paper, we investigate the efficacy of and propose the deep acoustic embeddings for identification of Parkinsonian speech. To this end, we conduct several experiments to benchmark deep acoustic embeddings against handcrafted features for differentiating between speech from individuals with Parkinson’s disease and those who are healthy. We report that deep acoustic embeddings consistently perform better than domain-knowledge features. We also report on the usefulness of decision-level fusion for improving the classification performance of a model trained on these embeddings.

Highlights

  • Parkinson’s Disease (PD) is a progressive neurodegenerative disorder caused by decay of neurons in the area of the brain which controls body movements [1]

  • In terms of disabilityadjusted life year (DALY) score, a commonly used metric which quantifies the number of years lost due to ill-health, the burden of PD is on a rise, with the number of DALYs increasing from 1,617,000 in 2005 to 1,762,000 in 2015, and is expected to increase up to 2,015,000 by the year 2030

  • We investigate the efficacy of deep acoustic embeddings generated from pre-trained deep neural works for the task of automated identification of Parkinsonian speech

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Summary

Introduction

Parkinson’s Disease (PD) is a progressive neurodegenerative disorder caused by decay of neurons in the area of the brain which controls body movements [1]. It manifests as muscle rigidity, slowness of body movement, compromised gait, and involuntary shaking amongst other symptoms. Parkinson’s disease does not currently have a cure and improving the quality-of-life of patients is of prime importance. While brain imaging has been a successful tool, it is invasive Such tests require patients to visit special facilities, which may not be convenient for the elderly

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