A Cloud-Based Machine Learning Approach to Reduce Noise in ECG Arrhythmias for Smart Healthcare Services

ECG (electrocardiogram) identifies and traces targets and is commonly employed in cardiac disease detection. It is necessary for monitoring precise target trajectories. Estimations of ECG are nonlinear as the parameters TDEs (time delays) and Doppler shifts are computed on receipt of echoes where EK...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Alsanie, W.F (Author), Altamirano, G.C (Author), Asakipaam, S.A (Author), Gago, D.O (Author), Jain, P. (Author), Rizwan, A. (Author), Sandoval Núñez, R.A (Author)
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: NLM (Medline) 2022
Online Access:View Fulltext in Publisher
Description
Summary:ECG (electrocardiogram) identifies and traces targets and is commonly employed in cardiac disease detection. It is necessary for monitoring precise target trajectories. Estimations of ECG are nonlinear as the parameters TDEs (time delays) and Doppler shifts are computed on receipt of echoes where EKFs (extended Kalman filters) and electrocardiogram have not been examined for computations. ECG, certain times, results in poor accuracies and low SNRs (signal-to-noise ratios), especially while encountering complicated environments. This work proposes to track online filter performances while using optimization techniques to enhance outcomes with the removal of noise in the signal. The use of cost functions can assist state corrections while lowering costs. A new parameter is optimized using IMCEHOs (Improved Mutation Chaotic Elephant Herding Optimizations) by linearly approximating system nonlinearity where multi-iterative function (Optimized Iterative UKFs) predicts a target's unknown parameters. To obtain optimal solutions theoretically, multi-iterative function takes less iteration, resulting in shorter execution times. The proposed multi-iterative function provides numerical approximations, which are derivative-free implementations. Signals are updated in the cloud environment; the updates are received by the patients from home. The simulation evaluation results with estimators show better performances in terms of reduced NMSEs (normalized mean square errors), RMSEs (root mean squared errors), SNRs, variances, and better accuracies than current approaches. Machine learning algorithms have been used to predict the stages of heart disease, which is updated to the patient in the cloud environment. The proposed work has a 91.0% accuracy rate with an error rate of 0.05% by reducing noise levels. Copyright © 2022 Paras Jain et al.
ISBN:16875273 (ISSN)
ISSN:16875273 (ISSN)
DOI:10.1155/2022/3773883