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  4. Ambulatory system for human motion analysis using a kinematic sensor: Monitoring of daily physical activity in the elderly
 
research article

Ambulatory system for human motion analysis using a kinematic sensor: Monitoring of daily physical activity in the elderly

Najafi, B.  
•
Aminian, K.  
•
Paraschiv-Ionescu, A.  
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2003
Ieee Transactions on Biomedical Engineering

A new method of physical activity monitoring is presented, which is able to detect body postures (sitting, standing, and lying) and periods of walking in elderly persons using only one kinematic sensor attached to the chest. The wavelet transform, in conjunction with a simple kinematics model, was used to detect different postural transitions (PTs) and walking periods during daily physical activity. To evaluate the system, three studies were performed. The method was first tested on 11 community-dwelling elderly subjects in a gait laboratory where, an optical motion system (Vicon) was used as a reference system. In the second study, the system was tested for classifying PTs (i.e., lying-to-sitting, sitting-to-lying, and turning the body in bed) in 24 hospitalized elderly persons. Finally, in a third study monitoring was performed on nine elderly, persons for 45-60 min during their daily physical activity. Moreover, the possibility-to-perform long-term monitoring over 12 h has been shown. The first. study revealed a close concordance between the ambulatory and reference systems. Overall, subjects performed 349 PTs during this study. Compared with the reference system, the ambulatory system had an overall sensitivity of 99% for detection of the different PTs. Sensitivities and specificities were 93% and 82% in sit-to-stand, and 82% and 94% in stand-to-sit, respectively. In both first and second studies, the ambulatory system also showed a very high accuracy (> 99%) in identifying the 62 transfers or rolling out of bed, As well as 144 different posture changes to the back, ventral, right and left sides. Relatively high sensitivity (> 90%) was obtained for the classification of usual physical activities in the third study in comparison with visual observation. Sensitivities and specificities were, respectively, 90.2% and 93.4% in sitting, 92.2% and 92.1% in "standing + walking," and, finally, 98.4% and 99.7% in lying. Overall detection errors (as percent of range) were 3.9% for "standing.+ walking," 4.1% for sitting, and 0.3% for lying. Finally, overall symmetric mean average errors were 12% for "standing + walking," 8.2% for sitting, and. 1.3% for lying.

  • Details
  • Metrics
Type
research article
DOI
10.1109/TBME.2003.812189
Web of Science ID

WOS:000183413100008

Author(s)
Najafi, B.  
Aminian, K.  
Paraschiv-Ionescu, A.  
Loew, F.
Bula, C.
Robert, Ph.  
Date Issued

2003

Published in
Ieee Transactions on Biomedical Engineering
Volume

50

Issue

6

Start page

711

End page

723

Subjects

ambulatory system

•

elderly people

•

kinematic sensor

•

long-term

•

monitoring

•

physical activity

•

postural transition

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wavelet transform

•

ENERGY-EXPENDITURE

•

TRIAXIAL ACCELEROMETER

•

PORTABLE ACCELEROMETER

•

VALIDATION

•

DECOMPOSITION

•

POSTURE

•

SIT

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LMAM  
Available on Infoscience
November 30, 2006
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/237156
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