Infant movement classification through pressure distribution analysis
Tomas Kulvicius, Dajie Zhang, Karin Nielsen-Saines, Sven B\"olte, Marc, Kraft, Christa Einspieler, Luise Poustka, Florentin W\"org\"otter, Peter B, Marschik

TL;DR
This study explores a non-intrusive pressure sensing method combined with neural networks to classify infant movements, aiming to facilitate early detection of neuromotor disorders like cerebral palsy.
Contribution
It introduces a pressure-based approach with neural network models, especially CNNs, for classifying infant movement patterns, demonstrating promising accuracy for clinical application.
Findings
CNN achieved 81.4% accuracy in classifying movement patterns.
Pressure sensing offers a scalable, non-intrusive method for infant movement analysis.
The approach shows potential for large-scale clinical use.
Abstract
Aiming at objective early detection of neuromotor disorders such as cerebral palsy, we proposed an innovative non-intrusive approach using a pressure sensing device to classify infant general movements (GMs). Here, we tested the feasibility of using pressure data to differentiate typical GM patterns of the ''fidgety period'' (i.e., fidgety movements) vs. the ''pre-fidgety period'' (i.e., writhing movements). Participants (N = 45) were sampled from a typically-developing infant cohort. Multi-modal sensor data, including pressure data from a 32x32-grid pressure sensing mat with 1024 sensors, were prospectively recorded for each infant in seven succeeding laboratory sessions in biweekly intervals from 4-16 weeks of post-term age. For proof-of-concept, 1776 pressure data snippets, each 5s long, from the two targeted age periods were taken for movement classification. Each snippet was…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNeonatal and fetal brain pathology · Infant Development and Preterm Care · Neonatal Respiratory Health Research
