Bayesian Pure-Tone Audiometry Through Active Learning Under Informed Priors

Pure-tone audiometry—the process of estimating a person's hearing threshold from “audible” and “inaudible” responses to tones of varying frequency and intensity—is the basis for diagnosing and quantifying hearing loss. By taking a probabilistic modeling approach, both optimal tone selection (in...

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Main Authors: Marco Cox, Bert de Vries
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2021-08-01
Series:Frontiers in Digital Health
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fdgth.2021.723348/full
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spelling doaj-de5d50720d6843a4aa532b616edf0a062021-08-13T09:56:57ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Digital Health2673-253X2021-08-01310.3389/fdgth.2021.723348723348Bayesian Pure-Tone Audiometry Through Active Learning Under Informed PriorsMarco Cox0Bert de Vries1Bert de Vries2Signal Processing Systems Group, Department of Electrical Engineering, Eindhoven University of Technology, Eindhoven, NetherlandsSignal Processing Systems Group, Department of Electrical Engineering, Eindhoven University of Technology, Eindhoven, NetherlandsGN Hearing, Eindhoven, NetherlandsPure-tone audiometry—the process of estimating a person's hearing threshold from “audible” and “inaudible” responses to tones of varying frequency and intensity—is the basis for diagnosing and quantifying hearing loss. By taking a probabilistic modeling approach, both optimal tone selection (in terms of expected information gain) and hearing threshold estimation can be derived through Bayesian inference methods. The performance of probabilistic model-based audiometry methods is directly linked to the quality of the underlying model. In recent years, Gaussian process (GP) models have been shown to provide good results in this context. We present methods to improve the efficiency of GP-based audiometry procedures by improving the underlying model. Instead of a single GP, we propose to use a GP mixture model that can be conditioned on side-information about the subject. The underlying idea is that one can typically distinguish between different types of hearing thresholds, enabling a mixture model to better capture the statistical properties of hearing thresholds among a population. Instead of modeling all hearing thresholds by a single GP, a mixture model allows specific types of hearing thresholds to be modeled by independent GP models. Moreover, the mixing coefficients can be conditioned on side-information such as age and gender, capturing the correlations between age, gender, and hearing threshold. We show how a GP mixture model can be optimized for a specific target population by learning the parameters from a data set containing annotated audiograms. We also derive an optimal tone selection method based on greedy information gain maximization, as well as hearing threshold estimation through Bayesian inference. The proposed models are fitted to a data set containing roughly 176 thousand annotated audiograms collected in the Nordic countries. We compare the predictive accuracies of optimized mixture models of varying sizes with that of an optimized single-GP model. The usefulness of the optimized models is tested in audiometry simulations. Simulation results indicate that an optimized GP mixture model can significantly outperform an optimized single-GP model in terms of predictive accuracy, and leads to significant increases the efficiency of the resulting Bayesian audiometry procedure.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fdgth.2021.723348/fullactive learningaudiometryBayesian inferenceGaussian processmachine learningprobabilistic modeling
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Marco Cox
Bert de Vries
Bert de Vries
spellingShingle Marco Cox
Bert de Vries
Bert de Vries
Bayesian Pure-Tone Audiometry Through Active Learning Under Informed Priors
Frontiers in Digital Health
active learning
audiometry
Bayesian inference
Gaussian process
machine learning
probabilistic modeling
author_facet Marco Cox
Bert de Vries
Bert de Vries
author_sort Marco Cox
title Bayesian Pure-Tone Audiometry Through Active Learning Under Informed Priors
title_short Bayesian Pure-Tone Audiometry Through Active Learning Under Informed Priors
title_full Bayesian Pure-Tone Audiometry Through Active Learning Under Informed Priors
title_fullStr Bayesian Pure-Tone Audiometry Through Active Learning Under Informed Priors
title_full_unstemmed Bayesian Pure-Tone Audiometry Through Active Learning Under Informed Priors
title_sort bayesian pure-tone audiometry through active learning under informed priors
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Digital Health
issn 2673-253X
publishDate 2021-08-01
description Pure-tone audiometry—the process of estimating a person's hearing threshold from “audible” and “inaudible” responses to tones of varying frequency and intensity—is the basis for diagnosing and quantifying hearing loss. By taking a probabilistic modeling approach, both optimal tone selection (in terms of expected information gain) and hearing threshold estimation can be derived through Bayesian inference methods. The performance of probabilistic model-based audiometry methods is directly linked to the quality of the underlying model. In recent years, Gaussian process (GP) models have been shown to provide good results in this context. We present methods to improve the efficiency of GP-based audiometry procedures by improving the underlying model. Instead of a single GP, we propose to use a GP mixture model that can be conditioned on side-information about the subject. The underlying idea is that one can typically distinguish between different types of hearing thresholds, enabling a mixture model to better capture the statistical properties of hearing thresholds among a population. Instead of modeling all hearing thresholds by a single GP, a mixture model allows specific types of hearing thresholds to be modeled by independent GP models. Moreover, the mixing coefficients can be conditioned on side-information such as age and gender, capturing the correlations between age, gender, and hearing threshold. We show how a GP mixture model can be optimized for a specific target population by learning the parameters from a data set containing annotated audiograms. We also derive an optimal tone selection method based on greedy information gain maximization, as well as hearing threshold estimation through Bayesian inference. The proposed models are fitted to a data set containing roughly 176 thousand annotated audiograms collected in the Nordic countries. We compare the predictive accuracies of optimized mixture models of varying sizes with that of an optimized single-GP model. The usefulness of the optimized models is tested in audiometry simulations. Simulation results indicate that an optimized GP mixture model can significantly outperform an optimized single-GP model in terms of predictive accuracy, and leads to significant increases the efficiency of the resulting Bayesian audiometry procedure.
topic active learning
audiometry
Bayesian inference
Gaussian process
machine learning
probabilistic modeling
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fdgth.2021.723348/full
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