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Compressed Deep Learning Models for Wearable Atrial Fibrillation Detection through Attention

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journal contribution
posted on 2024-08-14, 11:05 authored by Marko Mäkynen, G Andre Ng, Xin Li, Fernando S Schlindwein, Timothy C Pearce
Deep learning (DL) models have shown promise for the accurate detection of atrial fibrillation (AF) from electrocardiogram/photoplethysmography (ECG/PPG) data, yet deploying these on resource-constrained wearable devices remains challenging. This study proposes integrating a customized channel attention mechanism to compress DL neural networks for AF detection, allowing the model to focus only on the most salient time-series features. The results demonstrate that applying compression through channel attention significantly reduces the total number of model parameters and file size while minimizing loss in detection accuracy. Notably, after compression, performance increases for certain model variants in key AF databases (ADB and C2017DB). Moreover, analyzing the learned channel attention distributions after training enhances the explainability of the AF detection models by highlighting the salient temporal ECG/PPG features most important for its diagnosis. Overall, this research establishes that integrating attention mechanisms is an effective strategy for compressing large DL models, making them deployable on low-power wearable devices. We show that this approach yields compressed, accurate, and explainable AF detectors ideal for wearables. Incorporating channel attention enables simpler yet more accurate algorithms that have the potential to provide clinicians with valuable insights into the salient temporal biomarkers of AF. Our findings highlight that the use of attention is an important direction for the future development of efficient, high-performing, and interpretable AF screening tools for wearable technology.

Funding

NIHR Leicester Biomedical Research Centre

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British Heart Foundation

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History

Author affiliation

College of Life Sciences College of Science & Engineering Cardiovascular Sciences Engineering

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Sensors

Volume

24

Issue

15

Pagination

4787

Publisher

MDPI AG

eissn

1424-8220

Copyright date

2024

Available date

2024-08-14

Language

en

Deposited by

Dr Timothy Pearce

Deposit date

2024-08-09

Data Access Statement

The data presented in this study are available from the corresponding author upon request.