
Exploiting multi‐lead electrocardiogram correlations using robust third‐order tensor decomposition
Author(s) -
Padhy Sibasankar,
Dandapat Samarendra
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
healthcare technology letters
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.45
H-Index - 19
ISSN - 2053-3713
DOI - 10.1049/htl.2015.0020
Subject(s) - singular value decomposition , beat (acoustics) , pattern recognition (psychology) , noise reduction , computer science , tensor (intrinsic definition) , qrs complex , distortion (music) , noise (video) , algorithm , artificial intelligence , mathematics , cardiology , physics , medicine , amplifier , computer network , bandwidth (computing) , acoustics , pure mathematics , image (mathematics)
In this Letter, a robust third‐order tensor decomposition of multi‐lead electrocardiogram (MECG) comprising of 12‐leads is proposed to reduce the dimension of the storage data. An order‐3 tensor structure is employed to represent the MECG data by rearranging the MECG information in three dimensions. The three‐dimensions of the formed tensor represent the number of leads, beats and samples of some fixed ECG duration. Dimension reduction of such an arrangement exploits correlations present among the successive beats (intra‐beat and inter‐beat) and across the leads (inter‐lead). The higher‐order singular value decomposition is used to decompose the tensor data. In addition, multiscale analysis has been added for effective care of ECG information. It grossly segments the ECG characteristic waves (P‐wave, QRS‐complex, ST‐segment and T‐wave etc.) into different sub‐bands. In the meantime, it separates high‐frequency noise components into lower‐order sub‐bands which helps in removing noise from the original data. For evaluation purposes, we have used the publicly available PTB diagnostic database. The proposed method outperforms the existing algorithms where compression ratio is under 10 for MECG data. Results show that the original MECG data volume can be reduced by more than 45 times with acceptable diagnostic distortion level.