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Phonemes based detection of parkinson’s disease for telehealth applications

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 21:05 authored by Nemuel Pah, Mohammod Abdul Motin, Dinesh KumarDinesh Kumar
Dysarthria is an early symptom of Parkinson’s disease (PD) which has been proposed for detection and monitoring of the disease with potential for telehealth. However, with inherent differences between voices of different people, computerized analysis have not demonstrated high performance that is consistent for different datasets. The aim of this study was to improve the performance in detecting PD voices and test this with different datasets. This study has investigated the effectiveness of three groups of phoneme parameters, i.e. voice intensity variation, perturbation of glottal vibration, and apparent vocal tract length (VTL) for differentiating people with PD from healthy subjects using two public databases. The parameters were extracted from five sustained phonemes; /a/, /e/, /i/, /o/, and /u/, recorded from 50 PD patients and 50 healthy subjects of PC-GITA dataset. The features were statistically investigated, and then classified using Support Vector Machine (SVM). This was repeated on Viswanathan dataset with smartphone-based recordings of /a/, /o/, and /m/ of 24 PD and 22 age-matched healthy people. VTL parameters gave the highest difference between voices of people with PD and healthy subjects; classification accuracy with the five vowels of PC-GITA dataset was 84.3% while the accuracy for other features was between 54% and 69.2%. The accuracy for Viswanathan’s dataset was 96.0%. This study has demonstrated that VTL obtained from the recording of phonemes using smartphone can accurately identify people with PD. The analysis was fully computerized and automated, and this has the potential for telehealth diagnosis for PD.

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Related Materials

  1. 1.
    DOI - Is published in 10.1038/s41598-022-13865-z
  2. 2.
    ISSN - Is published in 20452322

Journal

Scientific Reports

Volume

12

Number

9687

Issue

1

Start page

1

End page

9

Total pages

9

Publisher

Springer

Place published

United Kingdom

Language

English

Copyright

© Te Author(s) 2022 Open Access Tis article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 InternationaLicense

Former Identifier

2006116583

Esploro creation date

2022-10-29

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