mHealth Patient Care Improvement Study Through Statistical Analysis

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Description
Technological applications are continually being developed in the healthcare industry as technology becomes increasingly more available. In recent years, companies have started creating mobile applications to address various conditions and diseases. This falls under mHealth or the “use of mobile

Technological applications are continually being developed in the healthcare industry as technology becomes increasingly more available. In recent years, companies have started creating mobile applications to address various conditions and diseases. This falls under mHealth or the “use of mobile phones and other wireless technology in medical care” (Rouse, 2018). The goal of this study was to identify if data gathered through the use of mHealth methods can be used to build predictive models. The first part of this thesis contains a literature review presenting relevant definitions and several potential studies that involved the use of technology in healthcare applications. The second part of this thesis focuses on data from one study, where regression analysis is used to develop predictive models.

Rouse, M. (2018). mHealth (mobile health). Retrieved from https://searchhealthit.techtarget.com/definition/mHealth
Date Created
2020-05
Agent

New statistical transfer learning models for health care applications

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Description
Transfer learning is a sub-field of statistical modeling and machine learning. It refers to methods that integrate the knowledge of other domains (called source domains) and the data of the target domain in a mathematically rigorous and intelligent way, to

Transfer learning is a sub-field of statistical modeling and machine learning. It refers to methods that integrate the knowledge of other domains (called source domains) and the data of the target domain in a mathematically rigorous and intelligent way, to develop a better model for the target domain than a model using the data of the target domain alone. While transfer learning is a promising approach in various application domains, my dissertation research focuses on the particular application in health care, including telemonitoring of Parkinson’s Disease (PD) and radiomics for glioblastoma.

The first topic is a Mixed Effects Transfer Learning (METL) model that can flexibly incorporate mixed effects and a general-form covariance matrix to better account for similarity and heterogeneity across subjects. I further develop computationally efficient procedures to handle unknown parameters and large covariance structures. Domain relations, such as domain similarity and domain covariance structure, are automatically quantified in the estimation steps. I demonstrate METL in an application of smartphone-based telemonitoring of PD.

The second topic focuses on an MRI-based transfer learning algorithm for non-invasive surgical guidance of glioblastoma patients. Limited biopsy samples per patient create a challenge to build a patient-specific model for glioblastoma. A transfer learning framework helps to leverage other patient’s knowledge for building a better predictive model. When modeling a target patient, not every patient’s information is helpful. Deciding the subset of other patients from which to transfer information to the modeling of the target patient is an important task to build an accurate predictive model. I define the subset of “transferrable” patients as those who have a positive rCBV-cell density correlation, because a positive correlation is confirmed by imaging theory and the its respective literature.

The last topic is a Privacy-Preserving Positive Transfer Learning (P3TL) model. Although negative transfer has been recognized as an important issue by the transfer learning research community, there is a lack of theoretical studies in evaluating the risk of negative transfer for a transfer learning method and identifying what causes the negative transfer. My work addresses this issue. Driven by the theoretical insights, I extend Bayesian Parameter Transfer (BPT) to a new method, i.e., P3TL. The unique features of P3TL include intelligent selection of patients to transfer in order to avoid negative transfer and maintain patient privacy. These features make P3TL an excellent model for telemonitoring of PD using an At-Home Testing Device.
Date Created
2018
Agent