IEEE Transactions on Neural Systems and Rehabilitation Engineering (Jan 2023)

Accurate COP Trajectory Estimation in Healthy and Pathological Gait Using Multimodal Instrumented Insoles and Deep Learning Models

  • Ton T. H. Duong,
  • David Uher,
  • Sally Dunaway Young,
  • Rabia Farooquee,
  • Abigail Druffner,
  • Amy Pasternak,
  • Cara Kanner,
  • Maria Fragala-Pinkham,
  • Jacqueline Montes,
  • Damiano Zanotto

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1109/TNSRE.2023.3338519
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 31
pp. 4801 – 4811

Abstract

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Measuring center-of-pressure (COP) trajectories in out-of-the-lab environments may provide valuable information about changes in gait and balance function related to natural disease progression or treatment in neurological disorders. Traditional equipment to acquire COP trajectories includes stationary force plates, instrumented treadmills, electronic walkways, and insoles featuring high-density force sensing arrays, all of which are expensive and not widely accessible. This study introduces novel deep recurrent neural networks that can accurately estimate dynamic COP trajectories by fusing data from affordable and heterogeneous insole-embedded sensors (namely, an eight-cell array of force sensitive resistors (FSRs) and an inertial measurement unit (IMU)). The method was validated against gold-standard equipment during out-of-the-lab ambulatory tasks that simulated real-world walking. Root-mean-square errors (RMSE) in the mediolateral (ML) and anteroposterior (AP) directions obtained from healthy individuals (ML: 0.51 cm, AP: 1.44 cm) and individuals with neuromuscular conditions (ML: 0.59 cm, AP: 1.53 cm) indicated technical validity. In individuals with neuromuscular conditions, COP-derived metrics showed significant correlations with validated clinical measures of ambulatory function and lower-extremity muscle strength, providing proof-of-concept evidence of the convergent validity of the proposed method for clinical applications.

Keywords