A pilot study of the Earable device to measure facial muscle and eye movement tasks among healthy volunteers
Matthew F. Wipperman, Galen Pogoncheff, Katrina F. Mateo, Xuefang Wu,, Yiziying Chen, Oren Levy, Andreja Avbersek, Robin R. Deterding, Sara C., Hamon, Tam Vu, Rinol Alaj, Olivier Harari

TL;DR
This pilot study explores the use of the Earable wearable device to objectively measure facial muscle and eye movements, demonstrating its potential in clinical research for neuromuscular disorders.
Contribution
The study introduces a framework for processing and analyzing data from Earable, showing its capability to classify cranial muscle activities in healthy volunteers.
Findings
Earable can discriminate chewing, talking, and swallowing activities.
The device provides measurable features from EMG, EEG, and EOG signals.
Data classification accuracy supports its potential for clinical applications.
Abstract
Many neuromuscular disorders impair function of cranial nerve enervated muscles. Clinical assessment of cranial muscle function has several limitations. Clinician rating of symptoms suffers from inter-rater variation, qualitative or semi-quantitative scoring, and limited ability to capture infrequent or fluctuating symptoms. Patient-reported outcomes are limited by recall bias and poor precision. Current tools to measure orofacial and oculomotor function are cumbersome, difficult to implement, and non-portable. Here, we show how Earable, a wearable device, can discriminate certain cranial muscle activities such as chewing, talking, and swallowing. We demonstrate using data from a pilot study of 10 healthy participants how Earable can be used to measure features from EMG, EEG, and EOG waveforms from subjects performing mock Performance Outcome Assessments (mock-PerfOs), utilized widely…
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