Identification of Gait Events in Healthy Subjects and With Parkinson's Disease Using Inertial Sensors: An Adaptive Unsupervised Learning Approach

IEEE Trans Neural Syst Rehabil Eng. 2020 Dec;28(12):2933-2943. doi: 10.1109/TNSRE.2020.3039999. Epub 2021 Jan 28.

Abstract

Automatic identification of gait events is an essential component of the control scheme of assistive robotic devices. Many available techniques suffer limitations for real-time implementations and in guaranteeing high performances when identifying events in subjects with gait impairments. Machine learning algorithms offer a solution by enabling the training of different models to represent the gait patterns of different subjects. Here our aim is twofold: to remove the need for training stages using unsupervised learning, and to modify the parameters according to the changes within a walking trial using adaptive procedures. We developed two adaptive unsupervised algorithms for real-time detection of four gait events, using only signals from two single-IMU foot-mounted wearable devices. We evaluated the algorithms using data collected from five healthy adults and seven subjects with Parkinson's disease (PD) walking overground and on a treadmill. Both algorithms obtained high performance in terms of accuracy ( F1 -score ≥ 0.95 for both groups), and timing agreement using a force-sensitive resistors as reference (mean absolute differences of 66 ± 53 msec for the healthy group, and 58 ± 63 msec for the PD group). The proposed algorithms demonstrated the potential to learn optimal parameters for a particular participant and for detecting gait events without additional sensors, external labeling, or long training stages.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Adult
  • Algorithms
  • Foot
  • Gait
  • Healthy Volunteers
  • Humans
  • Parkinson Disease* / diagnosis
  • Unsupervised Machine Learning
  • Walking