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  • Contrastive learning of heart and lung sounds for label-efficient diagnosis. Patterns (New York, N.Y.) Soni, P. N., Shi, S., Sriram, P. R., Ng, A. Y., Rajpurkar, P. 1800; 3 (1): 100400

    Abstract

    Data labeling is often the limiting step in machine learning because it requires time from trained experts. To address the limitation on labeled data, contrastive learning, among other unsupervised learning methods, leverages unlabeled data to learn representations of data. Here, we propose a contrastive learning framework that utilizes metadata for selecting positive and negative pairs when training on unlabeled data. We demonstrate its application in the healthcare domain on heart and lung sound recordings. The increasing availability of heart and lung sound recordings due to adoption of digital stethoscopes lends itself as an opportunity to demonstrate the application of our contrastive learning method. Compared to contrastive learning with augmentations, the contrastive learning model leveraging metadata for pair selection utilizes clinical information associated with lung and heart sound recordings. This approach uses shared context of the recordings on the patient level using clinical information including age, sex, weight, location of sounds, etc. We show improvement in downstream tasks for diagnosing heart and lung sounds when leveraging patient-specific representations in selecting positive and negative pairs. This study paves the path for medical applications of contrastive learning that leverage clinical information. We have made our code available here: https://github.com/stanfordmlgroup/selfsupervised-lungandheartsounds.

    View details for DOI 10.1016/j.patter.2021.100400

    View details for PubMedID 35079716