Treffer: SMOTE-Based deep network with adaptive boosted sooty for the detection and classification of type 2 diabetes mellitus.

Title:
SMOTE-Based deep network with adaptive boosted sooty for the detection and classification of type 2 diabetes mellitus.
Source:
Multimedia Tools & Applications; Jul2025, Vol. 84 Issue 23, p26501-26526, 26p
Database:
Complementary Index

Weitere Informationen

Type 2 diabetes (T2D) is a prolonged disease caused by abnormal rise in glucose levels due to poor insulin production in the pancreas. However, the detection and classification of this type of disease is very challenging and requires effective techniques for learning the T2D features. Therefore, this study proposes the use of a novel hybridized deep learning-based technique to automatically detect and categorize T2D by effectively learning disease attributes. First, missing value imputation and a normalization-based pre-processing phase are introduced to improve the quality of the data. The Adaptive Boosted Sooty Tern Optimization (Adap-BSTO) approach is then used to select the best features while minimizing complexity. After that, the Synthetic Minority Oversampling Technique (SMOTE) is used to verify that the database classes are evenly distributed. Finally, the Deep Convolutional Attention-based Bidirectional Recurrent Neural Network (DCA-BiRNN) technique is proposed to detect and classify the presence and absence of T2D disease accurately. The proposed study is instigated via the Python platform, and two publicly available PIMA Indian and HFD databases are utilized in this study. Accuracy, NPV, kappa score, Mathew's correlation coefficient (MCC), false discovery rate (FDR), and time complexity are among the assessment metrics examined and compared to prior research. For the PIMA Indian dataset, the proposed method obtains an overall accuracy of 99.6%, FDR of 0.0038, kappa of 99.24%, and NPV of 99.6%. For the HFD dataset, the proposed method acquires an overall accuracy of 99.5%, FDR of 0.0052, kappa of 99%, and NPV of 99.4%, respectively. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

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