anyECG-chat: A Generalist ECG-MLLM for Flexible ECG Input and Multi-Task Understanding
By: Haitao Li , Ziyu Li , Yiheng Mao and more
Potential Business Impact:
Helps doctors understand heart rhythms from any ECG.
The advent of multimodal large language models (MLLMs) has sparked interest in their application to electrocardiogram (ECG) analysis. However, existing ECG-focused MLLMs primarily focus on report generation tasks, often limited to single 12-lead, short-duration (10s) ECG inputs, thereby underutilizing the potential of MLLMs. To this end, we aim to develop a MLLM for ECG analysis that supports a broader range of tasks and more flexible ECG inputs. However, existing ECG-QA datasets are often monotonous. To address this gap, we first constructed the anyECG dataset, which encompasses a wide variety of tasks, including report generation, abnormal waveform localization, and open-ended question answering. In addition to standard hospital ECGs, we introduced long-duration reduced-lead ECGs for home environments and multiple ECG comparison scenarios commonly encountered in clinical practice. Furthermore, we propose the anyECG-chat model, which supports dynamic-length ECG inputs and multiple ECG inputs. We trained the model using a three-stage curriculum training recipe with the anyECG dataset. A comprehensive evaluation was conducted, demonstrating that anyECG-chat is capable of supporting various practical application scenarios, including not only common report generation tasks but also abnormal waveform localization for long-duration reduced-lead ECGs in home environments and comprehensive comparative analysis of multiple ECGs.
Similar Papers
DiagECG: An LLM-Driven Framework for Diagnostic Reasoning via Discretized ECG Tokenization
Artificial Intelligence
Helps doctors understand heart signals better.
ALFRED: Ask a Large-language model For Reliable ECG Diagnosis
Machine Learning (CS)
Helps doctors diagnose heart problems from ECGs.
ECG-LLM -- training and evaluation of domain-specific large language models for electrocardiography
Computation and Language
Helps doctors understand heart signals better.