Cry-based infant pathology classification using GMMs.

Speech Commun

MMS Lab, Department of Electrical Engineering, École de Technologie Supérieure, Université du Québec, 1100 rue Notre-Dame Ouest, Montréal, QC, Canada, H3C 1K3.

Published: March 2016

Traditional studies of infant cry signals focus more on non-pathology-based classification of infants. In this paper, we introduce a noninvasive health care system that performs acoustic analysis of unclean noisy infant cry signals to extract and measure certain cry characteristics quantitatively and classify healthy and sick newborn infants according to only their cries. In the conduct of this newborn cry-based diagnostic system, the dynamic MFCC features along with static Mel-Frequency Cepstral Coefficients (MFCCs) are selected and extracted for both expiratory and inspiratory cry vocalizations to produce a discriminative and informative feature vector. Next, we create a unique cry pattern for each cry vocalization type and pathological condition by introducing a novel idea using the Boosting Mixture Learning (BML) method to derive either healthy or pathology subclass models separately from the Gaussian Mixture Model-Universal Background Model (GMM-UBM). Our newborn cry-based diagnostic system (NCDS) has a hierarchical scheme that is a treelike combination of individual classifiers. Moreover, a score-level fusion of the proposed expiratory and inspiratory cry-based subsystems is performed to make a more reliable decision. The experimental results indicate that the adapted BML method has lower error rates than the Bayesian approach or the maximum a posteriori probability (MAP) adaptation approach when considered as a reference method.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4971135PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.specom.2015.12.001DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

infant cry
8
cry signals
8
newborn cry-based
8
cry-based diagnostic
8
diagnostic system
8
expiratory inspiratory
8
bml method
8
cry
6
cry-based
4
cry-based infant
4

Similar Publications

Childhood experiences shape later parenting behaviors; however, few studies have examined the mechanisms that explain how parenting is transmitted across generations. The present study examined direct and indirect effects of mothers' remembered emotionally responsive parenting in childhood on maternal sensitivity to infant distress via parenting-related emotion, physiology, and cognition. Participants included 299 mothers ( = 29.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Helping parents to cope with infant regulatory disorders.

Front Child Adolesc Psychiatry

March 2024

Research Department of Behavioural Science and Health, University College London, London, United Kingdom.

The term Regulatory Disorders (RDs) refers to infants and young children who cry a lot, have poorly organised sleep-waking, or whose feeding is impaired. The characteristic they share is a failure to acquire autonomous self-control of these key behaviours, which most children develop in the first postnatal year. The concept of RDs is helpful in highlighting this question of how infant self-regulation is, or isn't, accomplished, in drawing these characteristics together and distinguishing them from others, and in focusing research and clinical attention on a common, but relatively neglected, set of concerns for families.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Aerodynamic and Acoustic Power in Infant Cry.

J Voice

January 2025

Utah Center for Vocology, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT; National Center for Voice and Speech, Salt Lake City, UT. Electronic address:

Objectives: Acoustic and aerodynamic powers in infant cry are not scaled downward with body size or vocal tract size. The objective here was to show that high lung pressures and impedance matching are used to produce power levels comparable to those in adults.

Study Design And Methodology: A computational model was used to obtain power distributions along the infant airway.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

: Lidocaine-prilocaine cream effectively reduces vaccination pain, improving vaccination adherence and advocating for its routine use in healthcare settings. : This review used PRISMA guidelines and the PICOT format to structure the analysis. The focus was on paediatric patients aged 0-12 months requiring intramuscular vaccinations, comparing the application of lidocaine-prilocaine cream to other interventions or no treatment.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!