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Diagnosis of people with mild Parkinson's symptoms is difficult. Nevertheless, variations in gait pattern can be utilised to this purpose, when measured via Inertial Measurement Units (IMUs). Human gait, however, possesses a high degree of variability across individuals, and is subject to numerous nuisance factors. Therefore, off-the-shelf Machine Learning techniques may fail to classify it with the accuracy required in clinical trials. In this paper we propose a novel framework in which IMU gait measurement sequences sampled during a 10m walk are first encoded as hidden Markov models (HMMs) to extract their dynamics and provide a fixed-length representation. Given sufficient training samples, the distance between HMMs which optimises classification performance is learned and employed in a classical Nearest Neighbour classifier. Our tests demonstrate how this technique achieves accuracy of 85.51% over a 156 people with Parkinson's with a representative range of severity and 424 typically developed adults, which is the top performance achieved so far over a cohort of such size, based on single measurement outcomes. The method displays the potential for further improvement and a wider application to distinguish other conditions.

Original publication

DOI

10.1016/j.gaitpost.2017.02.012

Type

Journal article

Journal

Gait posture

Publication Date

05/2017

Volume

54

Pages

127 - 132

Keywords

Gait, Hidden Markov models, Inertial Measurement Unit, Machine Learning algorithms, Metric learning, Parkinson's, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Algorithms, Female, Gait, Gait Disorders, Neurologic, Humans, Machine Learning, Male, Middle Aged, Parkinson Disease, Walking