Wearable pendant device monitoring using new wavelet-based methods shows daily life and laboratory gaits are different

被引:117
作者
Brodie, Matthew A. D. [1 ,2 ]
Coppens, Milou J. M. [1 ]
Lord, Stephen R. [1 ]
Lovell, Nigel H. [2 ]
Gschwind, Yves J. [1 ]
Redmond, Stephen J. [2 ]
Del Rosario, Michael Benjamin [2 ]
Wang, Kejia [2 ]
Sturnieks, Daina L. [1 ]
Persiani, Michela [1 ]
Delbaere, Kim [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ New S Wales, Falls & Balance Res Grp, Neurosci Res Australia, Barker St, Sydney, NSW 2031, Australia
[2] Univ New S Wales, Grad Sch Biomed Engn, Sydney, NSW 2031, Australia
关键词
Gait analysis; Wavelet; Remote; Wearable devices; Falls; PHYSICAL-ACTIVITY; ACTIVITY CLASSIFICATION; TRIAXIAL ACCELEROMETER; SYSTEM; RISK; RELIABILITY; VALIDATION; MOBILITY; SENSOR; HEAD;
D O I
10.1007/s11517-015-1357-9
中图分类号
TP39 [计算机的应用];
学科分类号
081203 ; 0835 ;
摘要
Morbidity and falls are problematic for older people. Wearable devices are increasingly used to monitor daily activities. However, sensors often require rigid attachment to specific locations and shuffling or quiet standing may be confused with walking. Furthermore, it is unclear whether clinical gait assessments are correlated with how older people usually walk during daily life. Wavelet transformations of accelerometer and barometer data from a pendant device worn inside or outside clothing were used to identify walking (excluding shuffling or standing) by 51 older people (83 +/- A 4 years) during 25 min of 'free-living' activities. Accuracy was validated against annotated video. Training and testing were separated. Activities were only loosely structured including noisy data preceding pendant wearing. An electronic walkway was used for laboratory comparisons. Walking was classified (accuracy a parts per thousand yen97 %) with low false-positive errors (a parts per thousand currency sign1.9 %, kappa a parts per thousand yen 0.90). Median free-living cadence was lower than laboratory-assessed cadence (101 vs. 110 steps/min, p < 0.001) but correlated (r = 0.69). Free-living step time variability was significantly higher and uncorrelated with laboratory-assessed variability unless detrended. Remote gait impairment monitoring using wearable devices is feasible providing new ways to investigate morbidity and falls risk. Laboratory-assessed gait performances are correlated with free-living walks, but likely reflect the individual's 'best' performance.
引用
收藏
页码:663 / 674
页数:12
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