eFurniture for home-based frailty detection using artificial neural networks and wireless sensors

The purpose of this study is to integrate wireless sensor technologies and artificial neural networks to develop a system to manage personal frailty information automatically. The system consists of five parts: (1) an eScale to measure the subject's reaction time; (2) an eChair to detect slowne...

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Published inMedical engineering & physics Vol. 35; no. 2; pp. 263 - 268
Main Authors Chang, Yu-Chuan, Lin, Chung-Chih, Lin, Pei-Hsin, Chen, Chun-Chang, Lee, Ren-Guey, Huang, Jing-Siang, Tsai, Tsai-Hsuan
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England Elsevier Ltd 01.02.2013
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Summary:The purpose of this study is to integrate wireless sensor technologies and artificial neural networks to develop a system to manage personal frailty information automatically. The system consists of five parts: (1) an eScale to measure the subject's reaction time; (2) an eChair to detect slowness in movement, weakness and weight loss; (3) an ePad to measure the subject's balancing ability; (4) an eReach to measure body extension; and (5) a Home-based Information Gateway, which collects all the data and predicts the subject's frailty. Using a furniture-based measuring device to provide home-based measurement means that health checks are not confined to health institutions. We designed two experiments to obtain optimum frailty prediction model and test overall system performance: (1) We developed a three-step process to adjust different parameters to obtain an optimized neural identification network whose parameters include initialization, L.R. dec and L.R. inc. The post-process identification rate increased from 77.85% to 83.22%. (2) We used 149 cases to evaluate the sensitivity and specificity of our frailty prediction algorithm. The sensitivity and specificity of this system are 79.71% and 86.25% respectively. These results show that our system is a high specificity prediction tool that can be used to assess frailty.
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ISSN:1350-4533
1873-4030
1873-4030
DOI:10.1016/j.medengphy.2011.09.010