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Effect of test duration and sensor location on the reliability of standing balance parameters derived using body-mounted accelerometers
by
Abdollah, Vahid
, Ralston, John
, Ho, Chester
, Noamani, Alireza
, Rouhani, Hossein
in
Accelerometer
/ Accelerometers
/ Accelerometry
/ Accuracy
/ Analysis
/ Balance
/ Biomaterials
/ Biomedical Engineering and Bioengineering
/ Biomedical Engineering/Biotechnology
/ Biotechnology
/ Care and treatment
/ Correlation coefficient
/ Correlation coefficients
/ Data collection
/ Diagnosis
/ Engineering
/ Equilibrium (Physiology)
/ Evaluation
/ Humans
/ IMU location
/ Inertial platforms
/ Inertial wearable sensors
/ Intervals
/ Leg
/ Mathematical analysis
/ Measuring instruments
/ Musculoskeletal diseases
/ Parameters
/ Postural Balance
/ Posture
/ Reliability
/ Reproducibility of Results
/ Sacrum
/ Sensors
/ Standing balance
/ Standing Position
/ Sternum
/ Test duration
/ Therapeutic applications
/ Vertebrae
2024
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Effect of test duration and sensor location on the reliability of standing balance parameters derived using body-mounted accelerometers
by
Abdollah, Vahid
, Ralston, John
, Ho, Chester
, Noamani, Alireza
, Rouhani, Hossein
in
Accelerometer
/ Accelerometers
/ Accelerometry
/ Accuracy
/ Analysis
/ Balance
/ Biomaterials
/ Biomedical Engineering and Bioengineering
/ Biomedical Engineering/Biotechnology
/ Biotechnology
/ Care and treatment
/ Correlation coefficient
/ Correlation coefficients
/ Data collection
/ Diagnosis
/ Engineering
/ Equilibrium (Physiology)
/ Evaluation
/ Humans
/ IMU location
/ Inertial platforms
/ Inertial wearable sensors
/ Intervals
/ Leg
/ Mathematical analysis
/ Measuring instruments
/ Musculoskeletal diseases
/ Parameters
/ Postural Balance
/ Posture
/ Reliability
/ Reproducibility of Results
/ Sacrum
/ Sensors
/ Standing balance
/ Standing Position
/ Sternum
/ Test duration
/ Therapeutic applications
/ Vertebrae
2024
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Effect of test duration and sensor location on the reliability of standing balance parameters derived using body-mounted accelerometers
by
Abdollah, Vahid
, Ralston, John
, Ho, Chester
, Noamani, Alireza
, Rouhani, Hossein
in
Accelerometer
/ Accelerometers
/ Accelerometry
/ Accuracy
/ Analysis
/ Balance
/ Biomaterials
/ Biomedical Engineering and Bioengineering
/ Biomedical Engineering/Biotechnology
/ Biotechnology
/ Care and treatment
/ Correlation coefficient
/ Correlation coefficients
/ Data collection
/ Diagnosis
/ Engineering
/ Equilibrium (Physiology)
/ Evaluation
/ Humans
/ IMU location
/ Inertial platforms
/ Inertial wearable sensors
/ Intervals
/ Leg
/ Mathematical analysis
/ Measuring instruments
/ Musculoskeletal diseases
/ Parameters
/ Postural Balance
/ Posture
/ Reliability
/ Reproducibility of Results
/ Sacrum
/ Sensors
/ Standing balance
/ Standing Position
/ Sternum
/ Test duration
/ Therapeutic applications
/ Vertebrae
2024
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Effect of test duration and sensor location on the reliability of standing balance parameters derived using body-mounted accelerometers
Journal Article
Effect of test duration and sensor location on the reliability of standing balance parameters derived using body-mounted accelerometers
2024
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Overview
Background
Balance parameters derived from wearable sensor measurements during postural sway have been shown to be sensitive to experimental variables such as test duration, sensor number, and sensor location that influence the magnitude and frequency-related properties of measured center-of-mass (COM) and center-of-pressure (COP) excursions. In this study, we investigated the effects of test duration, the number of sensors, and sensor location on the reliability of standing balance parameters derived using body-mounted accelerometers.
Methods
Twelve volunteers without any prior history of balance disorders were enrolled in the study. They were asked to perform two 2-min quiet standing tests with two different testing conditions (eyes open and eyes closed). Five inertial measurement units (IMUs) were employed to capture postural sway data from each participant. IMUs were attached to the participants’ right legs, the second sacral vertebra, sternum, and the left mastoid processes. Balance parameters of interest were calculated for the single head, sternum, and sacrum accelerometers, as well as, a three-sensor combination (leg, sacrum, and sternum). Accelerometer data were used to estimate COP-based and COM-based balance parameters during quiet standing. To examine the effect of test duration and sensor location, each 120-s recording from different sensor locations was segmented into 20-, 30-, 40-, 50-, 60-, 70-, 80-, 90-, 100-, and 110-s intervals. For each of these time intervals, time- and frequency-domain balance parameters were calculated for all sensor locations.
Results
Most COM-based and COP-based balance parameters could be derived reliably for clinical applications (Intraclass-Correlation Coefficient, ICC ≥ 0.90) with a minimum test duration of 70 and 110 s, respectively. The exceptions were COP-based parameters obtained using a sacrum-mounted sensor, especially in the eyes-closed condition, which could not be reliably used for clinical applications even with a 120-s test duration.
Conclusions
Most standing balance parameters can be reliably measured using a single head- or sternum-mounted sensor within a 120-s test duration. For other sensor locations, the minimum test duration may be longer and may depend on the specific test conditions.
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