Comparison of gait speeds from wearable camera and accelerometer in structured and semi-structured environments

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Abstract

A feasibility study was conducted to investigate the use of a wearable gait analysis system for classifying gait speed using a low-cost wearable camera in a semi-structured indoor setting. Data were collected from 19 participants who wore the system during indoor walk sequences at varying self-determined speeds (slow, medium, and fast). Gait parameters using this system were compared with parameters obtained from a vest comprising of a single triaxial accelerometer and from a marker-based optical motion-capture system. Computer-vision techniques and signal processing methods were used to generate frequency-domain gait parameters from each gait-recording device, and those parameters were analysed to determine the effectiveness of the different measurement systems in discriminating gait speed. Results indicate that the authors' low-cost, portable, vision-based system can be effectively used for in-home gait analysis.

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Schneider, B., Banerjee, T., Grover, F., & Riley, M. (2020). Comparison of gait speeds from wearable camera and accelerometer in structured and semi-structured environments. Healthcare Technology Letters, 7(1), 25–28. https://doi.org/10.1049/htl.2019.0015

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