Contactless hand tremor amplitude measurement using smartphones: development and pilot evaluation
James Bungay, Osasenaga Emokpae, Samuel D. Relton, Jane Alty, Stefan, Williams, Hui Fang, David C. Wong

TL;DR
This study develops a smartphone-based computer vision method to objectively measure hand tremor amplitude, demonstrating accuracy and robustness, which could improve diagnosis and monitoring of neurological diseases.
Contribution
A novel, contactless computer vision pipeline that accurately measures hand tremor amplitude from smartphone videos, addressing limitations of subjective clinical assessments.
Findings
Bias of 0.04 cm compared to gold standard
Limits of agreement from -1.27 to 1.20 cm
Robust to skin tone differences and occlusion
Abstract
Background: Physiological tremor is defined as an involuntary and rhythmic shaking. Tremor of the hand is a key symptom of multiple neurological diseases, and its frequency and amplitude differs according to both disease type and disease progression. In routine clinical practice, tremor frequency and amplitude are assessed by expert rating using a 0 to 4 integer scale. Such ratings are subjective and have poor inter-rater reliability. There is thus a clinical need for a practical and accurate method for objectively assessing hand tremor. Objective: to develop a proof of principle method to measure hand tremor amplitude from smartphone videos. Methods: We created a computer vision pipeline that automatically extracts salient points on the hand and produces a 1-D time series of movement due to tremor, in pixels. Using the smartphones' depth measurement, we convert this measure into…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNeurological disorders and treatments · Botulinum Toxin and Related Neurological Disorders · Genetic Neurodegenerative Diseases
