Just cough into your phone, please... MIT lab thinks it can diagnose COVID-19 
from the way you expectorate

By Katyanna Quach  Sat 31 Oct 2020  
https://www.theregister.com/2020/10/31/ai_covid_cough/


Academics claim their AI software can detect, with 98.5 per cent accuracy, 
whether or not someone has caught the COVID-19 coronavirus, just from the sound 
of their coughing.

To build this software, the MIT team used three ResNet50 models, a popular 
convolutional neural network designed by Microsoft. They’re normally used to 
process images for computer vision, though in this case they’re analyzing audio.

The boffins produced a dataset of 5,320 people, who in April and May submitted 
audio clips of themselves coughing.
Participants also had to fill out a questionnaire that asked if they had caught 
the coronavirus or not, if they had confirmed this with an official test or 
not, and what symptoms they had. Thus this experiment relies on the honesty of 
these human data sources, so bear that in mind.

The dataset was trimmed down to 5,000 recordings, half of them by those who 
said they tested positive for COVID-19, and the other half negative. 
Four-fifths of the samples were used to train the model, and the remaining 
clips were to test the model.

“We have created an AI pre-screening test that discriminates 98.5 per cent 
COVID-19 positives from a forced-cough recording, including 100 per cent of 
asymptomatics, at essentially no cost. This also includes an accompanying 
saliency map for longitudinal explainability,” the researchers published in the 
IEEE Journal of Engineering in Medicine and Biology.

The results appear promising enough that the team said they are working with a 
Fortune 100 company to flesh out their model into a fully fledged diagnostic 
tool.

“We think this shows that the way you produce sound changes when you have 
COVID, even if you’re asymptomatic,” added Brian Subirana, co-author of the 
paper and director of the AutoID Lab at MIT, this week.

They believe a smartphone app will provide a quick and easy way to test for the 
coronavirus that is free to run, and requires no invasive nasal swabbing or 
however else you want to directly detect the presence of the virus.

“The effective implementation of this group diagnostic tool could diminish the 
spread of the pandemic if everyone uses it before going to a classroom, a 
factory, or a restaurant."

This sort of application, once it gets the necessary regulatory approval, is 
most likely going to end up being a screening tool: cough into the mic, and if 
it thinks you have the virus, it'll advise you to get a proper medical test.

The uni's AutoID Lab had earlier developed a speech-analyzing model to screen 
people for Alzheimer's testing, though they turned their attention to COVID-19 
as the pandemic took hold.

“The sounds of talking and coughing are both influenced by the vocal cords and 
surrounding organs,” Subirana said.

"This means that when you talk, part of your talking is like coughing, and vice 
versa. It also means that things we easily derive from fluent speech, AI can 
pick up simply from coughs, including things like the person’s gender, mother 
tongue, or even emotional state. There is in fact sentiment embedded in how you 
cough.

“So we thought, why don’t we try these Alzheimer’s biomarkers [to see if 
they’re relevant] for COVID.”

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