Development of an Intelligent System for the Monitoring and Diagnosis of the Well-Being.
Lizeth-Guadalupe Machado-JaimesMartin Rogelio Bustamante-BelloAmadeo-José Argüelles-CruzMariel Alfaro-PoncePublished in: Sensors (Basel, Switzerland) (2022)
Today, society is more aware of their well-being and health, making wearable devices a new and affordable way to track them continuously. Smartwatches allow access to daily vital physiological measurements, which help people to be aware of their health status. Even though these technologies allow the following of different health conditions, their application in health is still limited to the following physical parameters to allow physicians treatment and diagnosis. This paper presents LM Research , a smart monitoring system mainly composed of a web page, REST APIs, machine learning algorithms, psychological questionnaire, and smartwatches. The system introduces the continuous monitoring of the users' physical and mental indicators to prevent a wellness crisis; the mental indicators and the system's continuous feedback to the user could be, in the future, a tool for medical specialists treating well-being. For this purpose, it collects psychological parameters on smartwatches and mental health data using a psychological questionnaire to develop a supervised machine learning wellness model that predicts the wellness of smartwatch users. The full construction of the database and the technology employed for its development is presented. Moreover, six machine learning algorithms (Decision Tree, Random Forest, Naive Bayes, Neural Networks, Support Vector Machine, and K-nearest neighbor) were applied to the database to test which classifies better the information obtained by the proposed system. In order to integrate this algorithm into LM Research , Random Forest being the one with the higher accuracy of 88%.
Keyphrases
- machine learning
- mental health
- big data
- public health
- neural network
- artificial intelligence
- healthcare
- deep learning
- mental illness
- health information
- physical activity
- climate change
- primary care
- cross sectional
- health promotion
- blood pressure
- emergency department
- psychometric properties
- risk assessment
- social media
- electronic health record
- combination therapy
- adverse drug
- patient reported