- Multi-Head Cross-Attentional PPG and Motion Signal Fusion for Heart Rate Estimation Nowadays, Hearth Rate (HR) monitoring is a key feature of almost all wrist-worn devices exploiting photoplethysmography (PPG) sensors. However, arm movements affect the performance of PPG-based HR tracking. This issue is usually addressed by fusing the PPG signal with data produced by inertial measurement units. Thus, deep learning algorithms have been proposed, but they are considered too complex to deploy on wearable devices and lack the explainability of results. In this work, we present a new deep learning model, PULSE, which exploits temporal convolutions and multi-head cross-attention to improve sensor fusion's effectiveness and achieve a step towards explainability. We evaluate the performance of PULSE on three publicly available datasets, reducing the mean absolute error by 7.56% on the most extensive available dataset, PPG-DaLiA. Finally, we demonstrate the explainability of PULSE and the benefits of applying attention modules to PPG and motion data. 5 authors · Oct 14, 2022
- KID-PPG: Knowledge Informed Deep Learning for Extracting Heart Rate from a Smartwatch Accurate extraction of heart rate from photoplethysmography (PPG) signals remains challenging due to motion artifacts and signal degradation. Although deep learning methods trained as a data-driven inference problem offer promising solutions, they often underutilize existing knowledge from the medical and signal processing community. In this paper, we address three shortcomings of deep learning models: motion artifact removal, degradation assessment, and physiologically plausible analysis of the PPG signal. We propose KID-PPG, a knowledge-informed deep learning model that integrates expert knowledge through adaptive linear filtering, deep probabilistic inference, and data augmentation. We evaluate KID-PPG on the PPGDalia dataset, achieving an average mean absolute error of 2.85 beats per minute, surpassing existing reproducible methods. Our results demonstrate a significant performance improvement in heart rate tracking through the incorporation of prior knowledge into deep learning models. This approach shows promise in enhancing various biomedical applications by incorporating existing expert knowledge in deep learning models. 4 authors · May 2, 2024