posted on 2006-10-03, 13:55authored byFernando Soares Schlindwein, A.C. Yi, Tim Edwards, I.C.H. Bien
The MIT-BIH arrhythmia database (48 ECG records of 30 min each) was used to find out, experimentally, which combination of centre frequency and bandwidth is ‘optimal’ for a pre-emphasis digital Finite Impulse Response (FIR) band-pass filter for QRS detection. An exhaustive search was performed for centre frequencies ranging from 13 to 20 Hz and for band-widths from 5 to 12 Hz, at integer values of 1 Hz for both. The criterion for optimality was simply the filter that, coupled with a simple threshold detector, produced the minimum number of errors (defined as the sum of false-positives and false-negatives). For the whole MIT-BIH database the ‘optimum’ point was found to be that where centre frequency, fc=19 Hz and bandwidth, BW=9 Hz.
History
Citation
MEDSIP 2006, The 3rd International Conference on Medical Signal and Information Processing, Glasgow, UK, 17-19 July, 2006.
Published in
MEDSIP 2006
Available date
2006-10-03
Notes
Paper given at MEDSIP 2006, The 3rd International Conference on Medical Signal and Information Processing, Glasgow, UK, 17-19 July, 2006. Paper archived here with the kind permission of the Institution of Engineering and Technology (http://www.theiet.org/).