Abstract

ObjectiveEarly recognition and referral are crucial for voice disorder management. Limited availability of subspecialists, poor primary care awareness, and the need for specialized equipment impede effective care. Thus, there is a need for a tool to improve voice pathology screening. Machine learning algorithms (MLAs) have shown promise in analyzing acoustic characteristics of phonation. However, few studies report clinical applications of MLAs for voice pathology detection. The objective of this study was to design and validate a MLA for detecting pathological voices. MethodsA MLA was developed for voice analysis. Audio samples converted into spectrograms were inputted into a pre-existing VGG19 convolutional neural network (CNN) and image-classifier. The resulting feature map was classified as either pathological or healthy using a Support Vector Machine (SVM) binary linear classifier. This combined MLA was “trained” with 950 sustained “/i/” vowel audio samples from the Saarbrucken Voice Database (SVD), which contains subjects with and without voice disorders. The trained MLA was “tested” with 406 SVD samples to determine sensitivity, specificity, and overall accuracy. External validation of the MLA was performed using clinical voice samples collected from patients attending a subspecialty voice clinic. ResultsThe MLA detected pathologies in SVD samples with 98.5% sensitivity, 97.1% specificity and 97.8% overall accuracy. In 30 samples obtained prospectively from voice clinic patients, the MLA detected pathologies with 100% sensitivity, 96.3% specificity and 96.7% overall accuracy. ConclusionsThis study demonstrates that a MLA using a simple audio input can detect diverse vocal pathologies with high sensitivity and specificity. Thus, this algorithm shows promise as a potential screening tool.

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