Machine learning to quantify physical activity in children with cerebral palsy: Comparison of group, group-personalized, and fully-personalized activity classification models

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Abstract

Pattern recognition methodologies, such as those utilizing machine learning (ML) approaches, have the potential to improve the accuracy and versatility of accelerometer-based assessments of physical activity (PA). Children with cerebral palsy (CP) exhibit significant heterogeneity in relation to impairment and activity limitations; however, studies conducted to date have implemented “one-size fits all” group (G) models. Group-personalized (GP) models specific to the Gross Motor Function Classification (GMFCS) level and fully-personalized (FP) models trained on individual data may provide more accurate assessments of PA; however, these approaches have not been investigated in children with CP. In this study, 38 children classified at GMFCS I to III completed laboratory trials and a simulated free-living protocol while wearing an ActiGraph GT3X+ on the wrist, hip, and ankle. Activities were classified as sedentary, standing utilitarian movements, or walking. In the cross-validation, FP random forest classifiers (99.0–99.3%) exhibited a significantly higher accuracy than G (80.9–94.7%) and GP classifiers (78.7–94.1%), with the largest differential observed in children at GMFCS III. When evaluated under free-living conditions, all model types exhibited significant declines in accuracy, with FP models outperforming G and GP models in GMFCS levels I and II, but not III. Future studies should evaluate the comparative accuracy of personalized models trained on free-living accelerometer data.

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Ahmadi, M. N., O’neil, M. E., Baque, E., Boyd, R. N., & Trost, S. G. (2020). Machine learning to quantify physical activity in children with cerebral palsy: Comparison of group, group-personalized, and fully-personalized activity classification models. Sensors (Switzerland), 20(14), 1–17. https://doi.org/10.3390/s20143976

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