Addressing Binary Classification over Class Imbalanced Clinical Datasets Using Computationally Intelligent Techniques.
Vinod KumarGotam Singh LalotraPonnusamy SasikalaDharmendra Singh RajputRajesh KaluriKuruva LakshmannaMohammad ShorfuzzamanAbdulmajeed AlsufyaniMueen UddinPublished in: Healthcare (Basel, Switzerland) (2022)
Nowadays, healthcare is the prime need of every human being in the world, and clinical datasets play an important role in developing an intelligent healthcare system for monitoring the health of people. Mostly, the real-world datasets are inherently class imbalanced, clinical datasets also suffer from this imbalance problem, and the imbalanced class distributions pose several issues in the training of classifiers. Consequently, classifiers suffer from low accuracy, precision, recall, and a high degree of misclassification, etc. We performed a brief literature review on the class imbalanced learning scenario. This study carries the empirical performance evaluation of six classifiers, namely Decision Tree, k-Nearest Neighbor, Logistic regression, Artificial Neural Network, Support Vector Machine, and Gaussian Naïve Bayes, over five imbalanced clinical datasets, Breast Cancer Disease, Coronary Heart Disease, Indian Liver Patient, Pima Indians Diabetes Database, and Coronary Kidney Disease, with respect to seven different class balancing techniques, namely Undersampling, Random oversampling, SMOTE, ADASYN, SVM-SMOTE, SMOTEEN, and SMOTETOMEK. In addition to this, the appropriate explanations for the superiority of the classifiers as well as data-balancing techniques are also explored. Furthermore, we discuss the possible recommendations on how to tackle the class imbalanced datasets while training the different supervised machine learning methods. Result analysis demonstrates that SMOTEEN balancing method often performed better over all the other six data-balancing techniques with all six classifiers and for all five clinical datasets. Except for SMOTEEN, all other six balancing techniques almost had equal performance but moderately lesser performance than SMOTEEN.
Keyphrases
- machine learning
- healthcare
- rna seq
- neural network
- coronary artery disease
- type diabetes
- mental health
- heart failure
- electronic health record
- metabolic syndrome
- case report
- skeletal muscle
- social media
- left ventricular
- single cell
- clinical practice
- aortic valve
- health insurance
- aortic stenosis
- health information
- transcatheter aortic valve replacement