Radar-Based Gait Parameter Estimation Techniques for Fall Risk Assessment
Impact Statement:Quantitative Gait Analysis (QGA) relies on expensive optical tracking systems in specialized laboratories, whereas radar-based in-home QGA can capture daily gait variatio...Show More
Abstract:
Current methods for fall risk assessment rely on Quantitative Gait Analysis (QGA) using costly optical tracking systems, which are often only available at specialized lab...Show MoreMetadata
Impact Statement:
Quantitative Gait Analysis (QGA) relies on expensive optical tracking systems in specialized laboratories, whereas radar-based in-home QGA can capture daily gait variations, providing more realistic, continuous assessment of mobility.
Abstract:
Current methods for fall risk assessment rely on Quantitative Gait Analysis (QGA) using costly optical tracking systems, which are often only available at specialized laboratories that may not be easily accessible to rural communities. Radar placed in a home or assisted living facility can acquire continuous ambulatory recordings over extended durations of a subject's natural gait and activity. Thus, radar-based QGA has the potential to capture day-to-day variations in gait, is time efficient and removes the burden for the subject to come to a clinic, providing a more realistic picture of older adults’ mobility. Although there has been research on gait-related health monitoring, most of this work focuses on classification-based methods, while only a few consider gait parameter estimation. On the one hand, metrics that are accurately and easily computable from radar data have not been demonstrated to have an established correlation with fall risk or other medical conditions; on the othe...
Radar-Based Gait Parameter Estimation Techniques for Fall Risk Assessment
Published in: IEEE Open Journal of Engineering in Medicine and Biology ( Volume: 5)