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Multimodal Freezing of Gait Detection: Analyzing the Benefits and Limitations of Physiological Data | IEEE Journals & Magazine | IEEE Xplore

Multimodal Freezing of Gait Detection: Analyzing the Benefits and Limitations of Physiological Data


Abstract:

Freezing of gait (FOG) is a debilitating symptom of Parkinson’s disease (PD), characterized by an absence or reduction in forward movement of the legs despite the intenti...Show More

Abstract:

Freezing of gait (FOG) is a debilitating symptom of Parkinson’s disease (PD), characterized by an absence or reduction in forward movement of the legs despite the intention to walk. Detecting FOG during free-living conditions presents significant challenges, particularly when using only inertial measurement unit (IMU) data, as it must be distinguished from voluntary stopping events that also feature reduced forward movement. Influences from stress and anxiety, measurable through galvanic skin response (GSR) and electrocardiogram (ECG), may assist in distinguishing FOG from normal gait and stopping. However, no study has investigated the fusion of IMU, GSR, and ECG for FOG detection. Therefore, this study introduced two methods: a two-step approach that first identified reduced forward movement segments using a Transformer-based model with IMU data, followed by an XGBoost model classifying these segments as FOG or stopping using IMU, GSR, and ECG features; and an end-to-end approach employing a multi-stage temporal convolutional network to directly classify FOG and stopping segments from IMU, GSR, and ECG data. Results showed that the two-step approach with all data modalities achieved an average F1 score of 0.728 and F1@50 of 0.725, while the end-to-end approach scored 0.771 and 0.759, respectively. However, no significant difference was found compared to using only IMU data in both approaches (p-values: 0.466 to 0.887). In conclusion, adding physiological data did not provide a statistically significant benefit in distinguishing between FOG and stopping. The limitations may be specific to GSR and ECG data, and may not generalize to other physiological modalities.
Page(s): 956 - 965
Date of Publication: 25 February 2025

ISSN Information:

PubMed ID: 40031584

Funding Agency:


References

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