Publications by authors named "T Teijeiro"

Acoustical knee health assessment has long promised an alternative to clinically available medical imaging tools, but this modality has yet to be adopted in medical practice. The field is currently led by machine learning models processing acoustical features, which have presented promising diagnostic performances. However, these methods overlook the intricate multi-source nature of audio signals and the underlying mechanisms at play.

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Article Synopsis
  • Epilepsy is a common neurological disorder that significantly affects patients' daily lives, yet current technological solutions for detection and monitoring are inadequate.
  • Hyperdimensional (HD) computing offers a more efficient approach for epilepsy detection through wearable devices, with advantages like simpler learning processes and lower memory needs compared to traditional methods.
  • The study explores innovative ways to build and enhance HD computing models for epilepsy detection, including the creation of hybrid models that improve detection accuracy and insights into individual epilepsy patterns.
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Epilepsy is a chronic neurological disorder that affects a significant portion of the human population and imposes serious risks in the daily life. Despite advances in machine learning and IoT, small, non-stigmatizing wearable devices for continuous monitoring and detection in outpatient environments are not yet widely available. Part of the reason is the complexity of epilepsy itself, including highly imbalanced data, multimodal nature, and very subject-specific signatures.

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Counting the number of times a patient coughs per day is an essential biomarker in determining treatment efficacy for novel antitussive therapies and personalizing patient care. Automatic cough counting tools must provide accurate information, while running on a lightweight, portable device that protects the patient's privacy. Several devices and algorithms have been developed for cough counting, but many use only error-prone audio signals, rely on offline processing that compromises data privacy, or utilize processing and memory-intensive neural networks that require more hardware resources than can fit on a wearable device.

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Background And Objective: Cough audio signal classification is a potentially useful tool in screening for respiratory disorders, such as COVID-19. Since it is dangerous to collect data from patients with contagious diseases, many research teams have turned to crowdsourcing to quickly gather cough sound data. The COUGHVID dataset enlisted expert physicians to annotate and diagnose the underlying diseases present in a limited number of recordings.

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