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      Estimating Missing Data in Temporal Data Streams Using Multi-directional Recurrent Neural Networks

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          Abstract

          Missing data is a ubiquitous problem. It is especially challenging in medical settings because many streams of measurements are collected at different-and often irregular-times. Accurate estimation of the missing measurements is critical for many reasons, including diagnosis, prognosis, and treatment. Existing methods address this estimation problem by interpolating within data streams or imputing across data streams (both of which ignore important information) or ignoring the temporal aspect of the data and imposing strong assumptions about the nature of the data-generating process and/or the pattern of missing data (both of which are especially problematic for medical data). We propose a new approach, based on a novel deep learning architecture that we call a Multi-directional Recurrent Neural Network that interpolates within data streams and imputes across data streams. We demonstrate the power of our approach by applying it to five real-world medical datasets. We show that it provides dramatically improved estimation of missing measurements in comparison to 11 state-of-the-art benchmarks (including Spline and Cubic Interpolations, MICE, MissForest, matrix completion, and several RNN methods); typical improvements in Root Mean Squared Error are between 35%-50%. Additional experiments based on the same five datasets demonstrate that the improvements provided by our method are extremely robust.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering
          IEEE Trans. Biomed. Eng.
          Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE)
          0018-9294
          1558-2531
          2018
          : 1
          Article
          10.1109/TBME.2018.2874712
          30296210
          4c895198-62b5-4518-b394-e6fe07c74b65
          © 2018
          History

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