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An efficient technique for compressing ECG signals using QRS detection, estimation, and 2D DWT coefficients thresholding

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TLDR
An efficient electrocardiogram signals compression technique based on QRS detection, estimation, and 2D DWT coefficients thresholding achieves high compression ratio with relatively low distortion and low computational complexity in comparison with other methods.
Abstract
This paper presents an efficient electrocardiogram (ECG) signals compression technique based on QRS detection, estimation, and 2D DWT coefficients thresholding. Firstly, the original ECG signal is preprocessed by detecting QRS complex, then the difference between the preprocessed ECG signal and the estimated QRS-complex waveform is estimated. 2D approaches utilize the fact that ECG signals generally show redundancy between adjacent beats and between adjacent samples. The error signal is cut and aligned to form a 2-D matrix, then the 2-D matrix is wavelet transformed and the resulting wavelet coefficients are segmented into groups and thresholded. There are two grouping techniques proposed to segment the DWT coefficients. The threshold level of each group of coefficients is calculated based on entropy of coefficients. The resulted thresholded DWT coefficients are coded using the coding technique given in the work by (Abo-Zahhad and Rajoub, 2002). The compression algorithm is tested for 24 different records selected from the MIT-BIH Arrhythmia Database (MIT-BIH Arrhythmia Database). The experimental results show that the proposed method achieves high compression ratio with relatively low distortion and low computational complexity in comparison with other methods.

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Citations
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Proceedings ArticleDOI

Efficient electrocardiogram data compression algorithm based on wavelet transform

TL;DR: This paper focuses on proposing a highly efficient compression method relying on both run length coding (RLC) and fast lifting wavelet transform (FLWT) for both 1 and 2 dimensional ECG data.
References
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Survey over image thresholding techniques and quantitative performance evaluation

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A comparison of the noise sensitivity of nine QRS detection algorithms

TL;DR: The noise sensitivities of nine different QRS detection algorithms were measured for a normal, single-channel, lead-II, synthesized ECG corrupted with five different types of synthesized noise: electromyographic interference, 60-Hz power line interference, baseline drift due to respiration, abrupt baseline shift, and a composite noise constructed from all of the other noise types.
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ECG data compression techniques-a unified approach

TL;DR: The theoretical bases behind the direct ECG data compression schemes are presented and classified into three categories: tolerance-comparison compression, DPCM, and entropy coding methods and a framework for evaluation and comparison of ECG compression schemes is presented.
Journal ArticleDOI

Wavelet compression of ECG signals by the set partitioning in hierarchical trees algorithm

TL;DR: A wavelet electrocardiogram (ECG) data codec based on the set partitioning in hierarchical trees (SPIHT) compression algorithm is proposed and is significantly more efficient in compression and in computation than previously proposed ECG compression schemes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Wavelet and wavelet packet compression of electrocardiograms

TL;DR: Pilot data from a blind evaluation of compressed ECG's by cardiologists suggest that the clinically useful information present in original ECG signals is preserved by 8:1 compression, and in most cases 16:1 compressed ECGs are clinically useful.
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