Every Step Counts – How Can We Accurately Count Steps with Wearable Sensors During Activities of Daily Living in Individuals with Neurological Conditions?

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Abstract

Wearable sensors are a promising tool to quantify physical activity, with step count serving as one of the most intuitive measures. However, significant gait alterations in individuals with neurological conditions limit the accuracy of step-counting algorithms trained on able-bodied individuals. Therefore, this study investigates the accuracy of step-counting during activities of daily living (ADL) in a neurological population. Seven individuals with neurological conditions wore seven accelerometers while performing ADL for 30 minutes. Step events manually annotated from video served as ground truth. An optimal sensing and analysis configuration for machine learning algorithm development (sensor location, filter range, window length, and regressor type) was identified and compared to existing algorithms developed for able-bodied individuals. The most accurate configuration includes a waist-worn sensor, a 0.5–3 Hz bandpass filter, a 5-second window, and gradient boosting regression. The corresponding algorithm showed a significantly lower error rate compared to existing algorithms trained on able-bodied data. Notably, all algorithms undercounted steps. This study identified an optimal sensing and analysis configuration for machine learning based step counting in a neurological population and highlights the limitations of applying able-bodied-trained algorithms. Future research should focus on developing accurate and robust step-counting algorithms tailored to individuals with neurological conditions.

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