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Comparative Study on the Prediction of Symptomatic and Climatic based Malaria Parasite Counts Using Machine Learning Models
Author(s) -
Opeyemi Aderiike Abisoye,
Rasheed Gbenga Jimoh
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
international journal of modern education and computer science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2075-017X
pISSN - 2075-0161
DOI - 10.5815/ijmecs.2018.04.03
Subject(s) - confusion matrix , malaria , parasite hosting , artificial neural network , artificial intelligence , false positive rate , confusion , support vector machine , computer science , sensitivity (control systems) , machine learning , pattern recognition (psychology) , medicine , immunology , psychology , world wide web , electronic engineering , psychoanalysis , engineering
Dynamics of Malaria parasite diagnosis is complex and been widely studied. Research is on-going on the effects of climatic variations on symptomatic malaria infection. Malaria diagnosis can be asymptomatically or symptomatically low, mild and high. An analytical program is needed to detect individual malaria parasite counts from complex network of several infection counts. This study adopted the experimental malaria parasite counts collected from selected hospitals in Minna Metropolis, Niger State, Nigeria and Climatic data collected at the time the experiment was conducted from NECOP, Bosso, FUT Minna, Niger State, Nigeria. One thousand and two hundred (1,200) experimental data were collected and two classifiers Support Vector Machine (SVM), Artificial Neural Network (ANN) do the prediction. Experimental results indicated that SVM produced Accuracy 85.60%, Sensitivity 84.06%, Specificity 86.49%, False Positive Rate(FPr) 0.1351% and False Negative Rate(FNr) 0.1594% than Neural Network model of Accuracy 48.33%, Sensitivity 60.61%, Specificity 45.48%, low False Positive Rate (FPr) 0.5442% and False Negative Rate(FNr) 0.3939% as depicted in their respective confusion matrix.

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