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Browsing by Author "Seneviratne, S"

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    PublicationEmbargo
    Machine Learning Based Automated Speech Dialog Analysis Of Autistic Children
    (IEEE, 2019-10-24) Wijesinghe, A; Samarasinghe, P; Seneviratne, S; Yogarajah, P; Pulasinghe, K
    Children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) have altered behaviors in communication, social interaction, and activity, out of which communication has been the most prominent disorder among many. Despite the recent technological advances, limited attention has been given to screening and diagnosing ASD by identifying the speech deficiencies (SD) of autistic children at early stages. This research focuses on bridging the gap in ASD screening by developing an automated system to distinguish autistic traits through speech analysis. Data was collected from 40 participants for the initial analysis and recordings were obtained from 17 participants. We considered a three-stage processing system; first stage utilizes thresholding for silence detection and Vocal Activity Detection for vocal isolation, second stage adopts machine learning technique neural network with frequency domain representations in developing a reliant utterance classifier for the isolated vocals and stage three also adopts machine learning technique neural network in recognizing autistic traits in speech patterns of the classified utterances. The results are promising in identifying SD of autistic children with the utterance classifier having 78% accuracy and pattern recognition 72% accuracy.
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    PublicationEmbargo
    Machine learning based automated speech dialog analysis of autistic children
    (IEEE, 2019-10-24) Wijesinghe, A; Samarasinghe, P; Seneviratne, S; Yogarajah, P; Pulasinghe, K
    Children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) have altered behaviors in communication, social interaction, and activity, out of which communication has been the most prominent disorder among many. Despite the recent technological advances, limited attention has been given to screening and diagnosing ASD by identifying the speech deficiencies (SD) of autistic children at early stages. This research focuses on bridging the gap in ASD screening by developing an automated system to distinguish autistic traits through speech analysis. Data was collected from 40 participants for the initial analysis and recordings were obtained from 17 participants. We considered a three-stage processing system; first stage utilizes thresholding for silence detection and Vocal Activity Detection for vocal isolation, second stage adopts machine learning technique neural network with frequency domain representations in developing a reliant utterance classifier for the isolated vocals and stage three also adopts machine learning technique neural network in recognizing autistic traits in speech patterns of the classified utterances. The results are promising in identifying SD of autistic children with the utterance classifier having 78% accuracy and pattern recognition 72% accuracy.
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    PublicationOpen Access
    A predictive model for paediatric autism screening
    (SAGE Publications, 2020-12) Wingfield, B; Miller, S; Yogarajah, P; Kerr, D; Gardiner, B; Seneviratne, S; Samarasinghe, P; Coleman, S
    Autism spectrum disorder is an umbrella term for a group of neurodevelopmental disorders that is associated with impairments to social interaction, communication, and behaviour. Typically, autism spectrum disorder is first detected with a screening tool (e.g. modified checklist for autism in toddlers). However, the interpretation of autism spectrum disorder behavioural symptoms varies across cultures: the sensitivity of modified checklist for autism in toddlers is as low as 25 per cent in Sri Lanka. A culturally sensitive screening tool called pictorial autism assessment schedule has overcome this problem. Low- and middle-income countries have a shortage of mental health specialists, which is a key barrier for obtaining an early autism spectrum disorder diagnosis. Early identification of autism spectrum disorder enables intervention before atypical patterns of behaviour and brain function become established. This article proposes a culturally sensitive autism spectrum disorder screening mobile application. The proposed application embeds an intelligent machine learning model and uses a clinically validated symptom checklist to monitor and detect autism spectrum disorder in low- and middle-income countries for the first time. Machine learning models were trained on clinical pictorial autism assessment schedule data and their predictive performance was evaluated, which demonstrated that the random forest was the optimal classifier (area under the receiver operating characteristic (0.98)) for embedding into the mobile screening tool. In addition, feature selection demonstrated that many pictorial autism assessment schedule questions are redundant and can be removed to optimise the screening process.

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