Exploring the Significance of Synthetic ECG Signals in Atrial Fibrillation Classification
Nadeem, Asim (2025-05-12)
Exploring the Significance of Synthetic ECG Signals in Atrial Fibrillation Classification
Nadeem, Asim
(12.05.2025)
Julkaisu on tekijänoikeussäännösten alainen. Teosta voi lukea ja tulostaa henkilökohtaista käyttöä varten. Käyttö kaupallisiin tarkoituksiin on kielletty.
avoin
Julkaisun pysyvä osoite on:
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi-fe2025051444547
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi-fe2025051444547
Tiivistelmä
This study aims to assess the role of synthetic Electrocardiogram (ECG) signals in improving the performance of atrial fibrillation (AF) classification and R-peak detection under a Bidirectional Long Short-Term Memory (BiLSTM) network. This study determines synthetic data as complementing real ECG data in constraining analysis on problems hampering cardiac signal analysis like limited data and its legal regulations, noise, and variation among ECG morphologies. The BiLSTM model was evaluated in a comprehensive setup and delivered robust performance with high accuracy, precision, recall and F1-scores that were highly dependent on synthetic data to enhance model generalization and reliability. For AF classification, there was also improvement in subtle detection of arrhythmic patterns, thus improving successful diagnosis at very complex cases. Synthetic signals were helpful as well in the detection of R-peaks, where the bidirectional architecture for the time-dependent characteristics of ECG waveforms performed conventional approaches. The findings indicated that synthetic data have the potential to fill gaps in real-world datasets, especially in cases where the arrhythmias are rare or with noisy signals. However, some of the limitations that include the absence of physiological variability in synthetic data along with computational complexity and the risks for overfitting were noted. The study discusses future directions that include widening the scope of diverse datasets and development of noise-resilient models along with optimization of computational resources for real-time clinical application. The research contributes to the field of electrocardiography by utilizing synthetic ECG signals for enhanced automatic cardiac monitoring systems. It shows the transformative promises of the use of synthetic data together with real data in developing more sophisticated diagnostic tools for the benefit of patients in different healthcare settings.