Author:
Barton Antony,Gaydecki Patrick,Holt Kimberley,Smith Jaclyn A
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Recent studies suggest that objectively quantifying coughing in audio recordings offers a novel means to understand coughing and assess treatments. Currently, manual cough counting is the most accurate method for quantifying coughing. However, the demand of manually counting cough records is substantial, demonstrating a need to reduce record lengths prior to counting whilst preserving the coughs within them. This study tested the performance of an algorithm developed for this purpose.
Methods
20 subjects were recruited (5 healthy smokers and non-smokers, 5 chronic cough, 5 chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and 5 asthma), fitted with an ambulatory recording system and recorded for 24 hours. The recordings produced were divided into 15 min segments and counted. Periods of inactive audio in each segment were removed using the median frequency and power of the audio signal and the resulting files re-counted.
Results
The median resultant segment length was 13.9 s (IQR 56.4 s) and median 24 hr recording length 62.4 min (IQR 100.4). A median of 0.0 coughs/h (IQR 0.0-0.2) were erroneously removed and the variability in the resultant cough counts was comparable to that between manual cough counts. The largest error was seen in asthmatic patients, but still only 1.0% coughs/h were missed.
Conclusions
These data show that a system which measures signal activity using the median audio frequency can substantially reduce record lengths without significantly compromising the coughs contained within them.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine,Otorhinolaryngology
Reference19 articles.
1. Burt CW, Schappert SM: Ambulatory care visits to physician offices, hospital outpatient departments, and emergency departments: United States, 1999--2000. Vital Health Stat. 2004, 13 (157): 1-70.
2. Schappert SM, Burt CW: Ambulatory care visits to physician offices, hospital outpatient departments, and emergency departments: United States, 2001-02. Vital Health Stat. 2006, 13 (159): 1-66.
3. Decalmer SC, Webster D, Kelsall AA, McGuinness K, Woodcock AA, Smith JA: Chronic cough: how do cough reflex sensitivity and subjective assessments correlate with objective cough counts during ambulatory monitoring?. Thorax. 2007, 62 (4): 329-334. 10.1136/thx.2006.067413.
4. Marsden PA, Smith JA, Kelsall AA, Owen E, Naylor JR, Webster D, Sumner H, Alam U, McGuinness K, Woodcock AA: A comparison of objective and subjective measures of cough in asthma. J Allergy Clin Immunol. 2008, 122 (5): 903-907. 10.1016/j.jaci.2008.08.029.
5. Kelsall A, Decalmer S, McGuinness K, Woodcock A, Smith JA: Sex differences and predictors of objective cough frequency in chronic cough. Thorax. 2009, 64 (5): 393-398. 10.1136/thx.2008.106237.
Cited by
34 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献