DocumentCode :
2881639
Title :
Upper limb motion capturing and classification for unsupervised stroke rehabilitation
Author :
Zhang, Zhe ; Fang, Qiang ; Ferry, Ferry
Author_Institution :
Sch. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., RMIT Univ., Melbourne, VIC, Australia
fYear :
2011
fDate :
7-10 Nov. 2011
Firstpage :
3832
Lastpage :
3836
Abstract :
In recent years, substantial amount of researches have been carried out on cost-effective remote/unsupervised stroke rehabilitation methods due to the increasing number of post-stroke hospitalisation and the healthcare expenditure associated. This leads to the need of a reliable remote monitoring scheme that can assists medical specialists in monitoring the condition of patients. The information required to provide this remote monitoring system include the general physiological signals and patient´s movement during the exercise. This information can be recorded and analysed to assess the patient condition.. Most of the conventional motion-capturing methods are visual based where large and expensive equipments are required and the tracking is generally limited in a certain area by the vision of the optical sensor. The non-visual based methods using inertial sensor suffer from drifting problem even when high-precision accelerometers and gyroscopes are used. This paper provides an alternative solution for patient´s motion capturing using a low-cost non-visual based wireless sensor tracking system. Each sensor node only contains a 3-axis accelerometer and a microcontroller embedded communication module. Unlike the conventional systems, the output of the sensor, which is a mixture of change in acceleration and gravity influence, is directly used without extracting the precise acceleration and rotation information. Although the output from the sensors does not provide a direct image of the patient´s movement, the waveform is still unique for all different types of motion and since the rehabilitation exercises are generally repetitive and pre-defined, the patient´s movement can be classified by comparing the sensors´ output to a series of templates. A series of experiments involving multiple subjects have been conducted and 200 movement samples were recorded and used to obtain templates, train classifier, and test system performance. K-Nearest Neighbor algorithm has - een adopted in the experiment and the validation test has shown a promising result of a 97.22% overall classification accuracy from 36 independent testing inputs.
Keywords :
biomechanics; patient monitoring; patient rehabilitation; telemedicine; wireless sensor networks; K-nearest neighbor algorithm; accelerometers; classification; cost-effective remote/unsupervised stroke rehabilitation methods; exercise; general physiological signals; gravity influence; gyroscopes; healthcare expenditure; low-cost non-visual based wireless sensor tracking system; microcontroller; optical sensor; patient monitoring; post-stroke hospitalisation; reliable remote monitoring scheme; remote monitoring system; upper limb motion capturing; Acceleration; Accelerometers; Accuracy; Robot sensing systems; Tracking; Training; Wireless communication;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
IECON 2011 - 37th Annual Conference on IEEE Industrial Electronics Society
Conference_Location :
Melbourne, VIC
ISSN :
1553-572X
Print_ISBN :
978-1-61284-969-0
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/IECON.2011.6119934
Filename :
6119934
Link To Document :
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