王超   

研究员(自然科学)
Supervisor of Doctorate Candidates
Supervisor of Master's Candidates
Gender:Male Status:Employed Department:School of Optical and Electronic Information Education Level:Postgraduate (Doctoral) Degree:Doctoral Degree in Engineering Discipline:Microelectronics and Solid-state Electronics
Electrical Circuit and System

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Language: 中文

Paper Publications

Automatic Pulmonary Auscultation Grading Diagnosis of Coronavirus Disease 2019 in China with Artificial Intelligence Algorithms: a Cohort Study

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Indexed by:Journal paper

First Author:H. Zhu, J. Lai

Correspondence Author:C Wang*, H. Zeng

Co-author:B. Liu, Z. Wen, Y. Xiong, H. Li, Y. Zhou, Q. Fu, G. Yu, X Yan, X Yang, J Zhang

Journal:Computer Methods and Programs in Biomedicine, Elsevier

Included Journals:SCI

Document Type:J

Volume:213

Issue:106500

DOI number:10.1016/j.cmpb.2021.106500

Date of Publication:2022-01-01

Impact Factor:7.027

Abstract:Background and Objective Research on automatic auscultation diagnosis of COVID-19 has not yet been developed. We therefore aimed to engineer a deep learning approach for the automated grading diagnosis of COVID-19 by pulmonary auscultation analysis. Methods 172 confirmed cases of COVID-19 in Tongji Hospital were divided into moderate, severe and critical group. Pulmonary auscultation were recorded in 6-10 sites per patient through 3M littmann stethoscope and the data were transferred to computer to construct the dataset. Convolutional neural network (CNN) were designed to generate classifications of the auscultation. F1 score, the area under the curve (AUC) of the receiver operating characteristic curve, sensitivity and specificity were quantified. Another 45 normal patients were served as control group. Results There are about 56.52%, 59.46% and 78.85% abnormal auscultation in the moderate, severe and critical groups respectively. The model showed promising performance with an averaged F1 scores (0.9938 95% CI 0.9923–0.9952), AUC ROC score (0.9999 95% CI 0.9998–1.0000), sensitivity (0.9938 95% CI 0.9910–0.9965) and specificity (0.9979 95% CI 0.9970–0.9988) in identifying the COVID-19 patients among normal, moderate, severe and critical group. It is capable in identifying crackles, wheezes, phlegm sounds with an averaged F1 scores (0.9475 95% CI 0.9440–0.9508), AUC ROC score (0.9762 95% CI 0.9848–0.9865), sensitivity (0.9482 95% CI 0.9393–0.9578) and specificity (0.9835 95% CI 0.9806–0.9863). Conclusions Our model is accurate and efficient in automatically diagnosing COVID-19 according to different categories, laying a promising foundation for AI-enabled auscultation diagnosing systems for lung diseases in clinical applications.

Links to published journals:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cmpb.2021.106500