Abstract
We present the results from a white-box machine learning approach to detect cardiac arrhythmias using electrocardiographic data. A C5.0 is trained to recognize four classes using common features. The four classes are (i) atrial fibrillation and atrial flutter, (ii) tachycardias (iii), sinus bradycardia and (iv) sinus rhythm. Data from 10,646 subjects, 83% of whom have at least one arrhythmia and 17% of whom exhibit a normal sinus rhythm, are used. The C5.0 is trained using 10-fold cross-validation and is able to achieve a balanced accuracy of 95.35%. By using the white-box machine learning approach, a clear and comprehensible tree structure can be revealed, which has selected the 5 most important features from a total of 24 features. These 5 features are ventricular rate, RR-Interval variation, atrial rate, age and difference between longest and shortest RR-Interval. The combination of ventricular rate, RR-Interval variation and atrial rate is especially relevant to achieve classification accuracy, which can be disclosed through the tree. The tree assigns unique values to distinguish the classes. These findings could be applied in medicine in the future. It can be shown that a white-box machine learning approach can reveal granular structures, thus confirming known linear relationships and also revealing nonlinear relationships. To highlight the strength of the C5.0 with respect to this structural revelation, the results of further white-box machine learning and black-box machine learning algorithms are presented.
Highlights
IntroductionThe prediction of machine learning (ML) algorithms has achieved great progress in the detection of diseases [1,2,3,4]
The prediction of machine learning (ML) algorithms has achieved great progress in the detection of diseases [1,2,3,4]. This has mostly been enabled by using algorithms with deep structure. Such black-box ML approaches do not cover the area of cause-effect relationships in detail
Class 1 arrhythmias are a heterogeneous group of tachycardias, or rapid heartbeat, and are combined
Summary
The prediction of machine learning (ML) algorithms has achieved great progress in the detection of diseases [1,2,3,4]. This has mostly been enabled by using algorithms with deep structure. Such black-box ML approaches do not cover the area of cause-effect relationships in detail. How exactly the results are achieved is difficult to understand [5]. For this reason, it makes sense to use white-box ML approaches.
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