Transferring Clinical Knowledge into ECGs Representation
By: Jose Geraldo Fernandes , Luiz Facury de Souza , Pedro Robles Dutenhefner and more
Potential Business Impact:
Makes heart monitors understand sickness better.
Deep learning models have shown high accuracy in classifying electrocardiograms (ECGs), but their black box nature hinders clinical adoption due to a lack of trust and interpretability. To address this, we propose a novel three-stage training paradigm that transfers knowledge from multimodal clinical data (laboratory exams, vitals, biometrics) into a powerful, yet unimodal, ECG encoder. We employ a self-supervised, joint-embedding pre-training stage to create an ECG representation that is enriched with contextual clinical information, while only requiring the ECG signal at inference time. Furthermore, as an indirect way to explain the model's output we train it to also predict associated laboratory abnormalities directly from the ECG embedding. Evaluated on the MIMIC-IV-ECG dataset, our model outperforms a standard signal-only baseline in multi-label diagnosis classification and successfully bridges a substantial portion of the performance gap to a fully multimodal model that requires all data at inference. Our work demonstrates a practical and effective method for creating more accurate and trustworthy ECG classification models. By converting abstract predictions into physiologically grounded \emph{explanations}, our approach offers a promising path toward the safer integration of AI into clinical workflows.
Similar Papers
Explaining deep learning for ECG using time-localized clusters
Machine Learning (CS)
Shows how heart machines understand heartbeats.
Inductive transfer learning from regression to classification in ECG analysis
Signal Processing
Creates fake heart data to train better heart disease detectors.
MIEO: encoding clinical data to enhance cardiovascular event prediction
Machine Learning (CS)
Predicts heart attacks using patient data.