Abstract

The normal and abnormal sounds from the respiratory system shed great light on medical science by revealing the quality, diseases and changes in people’s lungs. In medicine, this easy and old method, realized by the stethoscope, facilitates the diagnosis of diseases by specialists. This manual method can sometimes lead to wrong decisions in terms of sound detection due to different audibility. Detailed sound analysis is crucial for accurately detecting lung diseases with high mortality rates. As technology advances, the development of automated approaches based on machine learning is of great interest as they provide modern and highly accurate analysis. In today’s most popular topic, i.e., the COVID-19 disaster, the conflict between early detection of respiratory disease and machine learning for sound signal processing is extremely important. In this study, a machine learning model was developed to detect respiratory system sounds such as sneezing/coughing in disease diagnosis. The automatic model and approach development of breath sounds, which carry valuable information, results in early diagnosis and treatment. A successful machine learning model was developed in this study, which was a strong response to the challenge called the “Pfizer digital medicine challenge” on the “OSFHOME” open access platform. In the database provided in this challenge, which consists of 3 parts, features that effectively showed coughing/sneezing sound analysis were extracted from training, testing and validating samples. Based on the Mel frequency cepstral coefficients (MFCC) feature extraction method, mathematical and statistical features were prepared. The sequential forward selection (SFS) feature selection method was used to select the relevant and dominant variables among the obtained features to represent the model fully and accurately. Three different classification techniques were considered for successful respiratory sound classification in the dataset containing more than 3800 sounds. Support vector machine (SVM) with radial basis function (RBF) kernels, decision tree and ensemble aggregation classification methods were used as classification techniques. In an attempt to classify coughing/sneezing sounds from other sounds, SVM with RBF kernels was achieved with 83% success.

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