DocumentCode
1116136
Title
Incremental Diagnosis Method for Intelligent Wearable Sensor Systems
Author
Wu, Winston H. ; Bui, Alex A T ; Batalin, Maxim A. ; Liu, Duo ; Kaiser, William J.
Author_Institution
California Univ., Los Angeles
Volume
11
Issue
5
fYear
2007
Firstpage
553
Lastpage
562
Abstract
This paper presents an incremental diagnosis method (IDM) to detect a medical condition with the minimum wearable sensor usage by dynamically adjusting the sensor set based on the patient´s state in his/her natural environment. The IDM, comprised of a naive Bayes classifier generated by supervised training with Gaussian clustering, is developed to classify patient motion in- context (due to a medical condition) and in real-time using a wearable sensor system. The IDM also incorporates a utility function, which is a simple form of expert knowledge and user preferences in sensor selection. Upon initial in-context detection, the utility function decides which sensor is to be activated next. High-resolution in-context detection with minimum sensor usage is possible because the necessary sensor can be activated or requested at the appropriate time. As a case study, the IDM is demonstrated in detecting different severity levels of a limp with minimum usage of high diagnostic resolution sensors.
Keywords
Bayes methods; gait analysis; inference mechanisms; intelligent sensors; medical diagnostic computing; patient diagnosis; wearable computers; Gaussian clustering; in-context detection; incremental diagnosis method; intelligent wearable sensor system; naive Bayes classifier; patient motion classification; supervised training; Biomedical monitoring; Computerized monitoring; Costs; Instruments; Intelligent sensors; Intelligent systems; Medical conditions; Medical services; Sensor systems; Wearable sensors; Ambulatory physiologic monitoring; gait assessment; incremental diagnosis; inference engine; naÏve Bayes classifier; utility function; wearable sensor system; Algorithms; Clothing; Diagnosis, Computer-Assisted; Gait Disorders, Neurologic; Humans; Monitoring, Ambulatory; Reproducibility of Results; Sensitivity and Specificity;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Information Technology in Biomedicine, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1089-7771
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TITB.2007.897579
Filename
4300846
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