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With increasing number of people living with dementia, the problem of late diagnosis significantly impacts a person’s quality of life while early signs of dementia may provide useful insights to facilitate better treatment plans. With time, this progressive neurodegenerative syndrome could progress from mild cognitive impairment to dementia. A pattern of health conditions can be characterized in unsupervised manner to help predict this progress. As a significant extension to our previous work with streaming clustering model, we consider additional information for predicting dementia onset. With empirical observations, we discover the importance of examining sex and age to predict dementia onset. To this end, we propose a sex-specific model with age-constraint for predicting dementia onset and validate the effectiveness of our models using data from Mayo Clinic Study of Aging (MCSA). The proposed sex-specific models for older adult populations (>=65 years of age) outperformed the previous models with F-score of 77% and 78% for male-specific and female-specific models, respectively. Our experiments of sex-specific temporal clustering of features in older adults demonstrate the potential of more personalized models for early alerts of dementia.
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