BioMedical Engineering OnLine (Feb 2024)
Deep neural networks for wearable sensor-based activity recognition in Parkinson’s disease: investigating generalizability and model complexity
Abstract
Abstract Background The research gap addressed in this study is the applicability of deep neural network (NN) models on wearable sensor data to recognize different activities performed by patients with Parkinson’s Disease (PwPD) and the generalizability of these models to PwPD using labeled healthy data. Methods The experiments were carried out utilizing three datasets containing wearable motion sensor readings on common activities of daily living. The collected readings were from two accelerometer sensors. PAMAP2 and MHEALTH are publicly available datasets collected from 10 and 9 healthy, young subjects, respectively. A private dataset of a similar nature collected from 14 PwPD patients was utilized as well. Deep NN models were implemented with varying levels of complexity to investigate the impact of data augmentation, manual axis reorientation, model complexity, and domain adaptation on activity recognition performance. Results A moderately complex model trained on the augmented PAMAP2 dataset and adapted to the Parkinson domain using domain adaptation achieved the best activity recognition performance with an accuracy of 73.02%, which was significantly higher than the accuracy of 63% reported in previous studies. The model’s F1 score of 49.79% significantly improved compared to the best cross-testing of 33.66% F1 score with only data augmentation and 2.88% F1 score without data augmentation or domain adaptation. Conclusion These findings suggest that deep NN models originating on healthy data have the potential to recognize activities performed by PwPD accurately and that data augmentation and domain adaptation can improve the generalizability of models in the healthy-to-PwPD transfer scenario. The simple/moderately complex architectures tested in this study could generalize better to the PwPD domain when trained on a healthy dataset compared to the most complex architectures used. The findings of this study could contribute to the development of accurate wearable-based activity monitoring solutions for PwPD, improving clinical decision-making and patient outcomes based on patient activity levels.
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