Electrocardiogram signals play a pivotal role in cardiovascular diagnostics, providing essential information on electrical hearth activity. However, inherent noise and limited resolution can hinder an accurate interpretation of the recordings. In this paper an advanced Denoising Convolutional Autoencoder designed to process electrocardiogram signals, generating super-resolution reconstructions is proposed; this is followed by in-depth analysis of the enhanced signals. The autoencoder receives a signal window (of 5 s) sampled at 50 Hz (low resolution) as input and reconstructs a denoised super-resolution signal at 500 Hz. The proposed autoencoder is applied to publicly available datasets, demonstrating optimal performance in reconstructing high-resolution signals from very low-resolution inputs sampled at 50 Hz. The results were then compared with current state-of-the-art for electrocardiogram super-resolution, demonstrating the effectiveness of the proposed method. The method achieves a signal-to-noise ratio of 12.20 dB, a mean squared error of 0.0044, and a root mean squared error of 4.86%, which significantly outperforms current state-of-the-art alternatives. This framework can effectively enhance hidden information within signals, aiding in the detection of heart-related diseases.
Design and use of a Denoising Convolutional Autoencoder for reconstructing electrocardiogram signals at super resolution
Lomoio, Ugo;Veltri, Pierangelo;Guzzi, Pietro Hiram
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2025-01-01
Abstract
Electrocardiogram signals play a pivotal role in cardiovascular diagnostics, providing essential information on electrical hearth activity. However, inherent noise and limited resolution can hinder an accurate interpretation of the recordings. In this paper an advanced Denoising Convolutional Autoencoder designed to process electrocardiogram signals, generating super-resolution reconstructions is proposed; this is followed by in-depth analysis of the enhanced signals. The autoencoder receives a signal window (of 5 s) sampled at 50 Hz (low resolution) as input and reconstructs a denoised super-resolution signal at 500 Hz. The proposed autoencoder is applied to publicly available datasets, demonstrating optimal performance in reconstructing high-resolution signals from very low-resolution inputs sampled at 50 Hz. The results were then compared with current state-of-the-art for electrocardiogram super-resolution, demonstrating the effectiveness of the proposed method. The method achieves a signal-to-noise ratio of 12.20 dB, a mean squared error of 0.0044, and a root mean squared error of 4.86%, which significantly outperforms current state-of-the-art alternatives. This framework can effectively enhance hidden information within signals, aiding in the detection of heart-related diseases.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.


