A novel approach for modelling and classifying sit-to-stand kinematics using inertial sensors
Maitreyee Wairagkar, Emma Villeneuve, Rachel King, Balazs Janko,, Malcolm Burnett, Ann Ashburn, Veena Agarwal, R. Simon Sherratt, William, Holderbaum, William Harwin

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new two-sensor wearable system and a classification method to accurately model and analyze sit-to-stand movements, aiding assessment and rehabilitation especially in older adults and Parkinson's patients.
Contribution
It presents a novel three-segment body model with a unique classification technique using unsupervised learning and extended Kalman filter, requiring only two inertial sensors.
Findings
Achieved over 98% accuracy in classifying sit-to-stand transitions.
Successfully estimated thigh kinematics without direct measurement.
Validated on healthy and Parkinson's disease groups.
Abstract
Sit-to-stand transitions are an important part of activities of daily living and play a key role in functional mobility in humans. The sit-to-stand movement is often affected in older adults due to frailty and in patients with motor impairments such as Parkinson's disease leading to falls. Studying kinematics of sit-to-stand transitions can provide insight in assessment, monitoring and developing rehabilitation strategies for the affected populations. We propose a three-segment body model for estimating sit-to-stand kinematics using only two wearable inertial sensors, placed on the shank and back. Reducing the number of sensors to two instead of one per body segment facilitates monitoring and classifying movements over extended periods, making it more comfortable to wear while reducing the power requirements of sensors. We applied this model on 10 younger healthy adults (YH), 12 older…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBalance, Gait, and Falls Prevention · Stroke Rehabilitation and Recovery · Cerebral Palsy and Movement Disorders
