Artificial Intelligence, speech and language processing approaches to monitoring Alzheimer's Disease: a systematic review
Sofia de la Fuente Garcia, Craig Ritchie, Saturnino Luz

TL;DR
This systematic review examines how artificial intelligence and speech/language processing are used to predict Alzheimer's Disease, highlighting promising results but also significant challenges in standardization and clinical translation.
Contribution
The paper provides a comprehensive synthesis of research from 2000 to 2019 on AI-based speech and language methods for Alzheimer's diagnosis, identifying key limitations and future strategies.
Findings
Promising results across studies in AI-based Alzheimer's prediction
Few studies have been implemented in clinical practice
Main limitations include poor standardization and limited comparability
Abstract
Language is a valuable source of clinical information in Alzheimer's Disease, as it declines concurrently with neurodegeneration. Consequently, speech and language data have been extensively studied in connection with its diagnosis. This paper summarises current findings on the use of artificial intelligence, speech and language processing to predict cognitive decline in the context of Alzheimer's Disease, detailing current research procedures, highlighting their limitations and suggesting strategies to address them. We conducted a systematic review of original research between 2000 and 2019, registered in PROSPERO (reference CRD42018116606). An interdisciplinary search covered six databases on engineering (ACM and IEEE), psychology (PsycINFO), medicine (PubMed and Embase) and Web of Science. Bibliographies of relevant papers were screened until December 2019. From 3,654 search results…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDementia and Cognitive Impairment Research · Artificial Intelligence in Healthcare and Education
