Auscultation using stethoscopes allows the diagnosis of respiratory and cardiac diseases. However, these sounds interfere with each other both in time and frequency. In the case of recording heart sounds, it is possible to ask the patient to stop their breathing to perform auscultation and obtain a pure heart sound. But, in the case of lung sounds it is impossible to do the same. In this paper, a source separation method based on Non-negative Matrix Factorization (NMF) is used to decompose a signal into different components. The method proposed uses information from the estimated lung sound to reinsert the segments of interest into the original signal. The objective of this approximation is not to distort the segments of pure respiratory sound (free of heart sound). This method is compared to a base case of NMF decomposition on the raw signal. Three criteria for classifying the components based on the literature are also proposed, which will allow to indicate which component corresponds to each sound. The results were evaluated using temporal and spectral correlations, mean square error (MSE) and signal to distortion ratio (SDR) between the original respiratory signal and the respiratory signal estimated through the algorithm. It is shown that the best approximation is the NMF decomposition on the entire signal & replacing segments under different parameter variations.
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