31 research outputs found
An automatic wearable multi-sensor based gait analysis system for older adults.
Gait abnormalities in older adults are very common in clinical practice. They lead to serious adverse consequences such as falls and injury resulting in increased care cost. There is therefore a national imperative to address this challenge. Currently gait assessment is done using standardized clinical tools dependent on subjective evaluation. More objective gold standard methods (motion capture systems such as Qualisys and Vicon) to analyse gait rely on access to expensive complex equipment based in gait laboratories. These are not widely available for several reasons including a scarcity of equipment, need for technical staff, need for patients to attend in person, complicated time consuming procedures and overall expense. To broaden the use of accurate quantitative gait monitoring and assessment, the major goal of this thesis is to develop an affordable automatic gait analysis system that will provide comprehensive gait information and allow use in clinic or at home. It will also be able to quantify and visualize gait parameters, identify gait variables and changes, monitor abnormal gait patterns of older people in order to reduce the potential for falling and support falls risk management. A research program based on conducting experiments on volunteers is developed in collaboration with other researchers in Bournemouth University, The Royal Bournemouth Hospital and care homes. This thesis consists of five different studies toward addressing our major goal. Firstly, a study on the effects on sensor output from an Inertial Measurement Unit (IMU) attached to different anatomical foot locations. Placing an IMU over the bony prominence of the first cuboid bone is the best place as it delivers the most accurate data. Secondly, an automatic gait feature extraction method for analysing spatiotemporal gait features which shows that it is possible to extract gait features automatically outside of a gait laboratory. Thirdly, user friendly and easy to interpret visualization approaches are proposed to demonstrate real time spatiotemporal gait information. Four proposed approaches have the potential of helping professionals detect and interpret gait asymmetry. Fourthly, a validation study of spatiotemporal IMU extracted features compared with gold standard Motion Capture System and Treadmill measurements in young and older adults is conducted. The results obtained from three experimental conditions demonstrate that our IMU gait extracted features are highly valid for spatiotemporal gait variables in young and older adults. In the last study, an evaluation system using Procrustes and Euclidean distance matrix analysis is proposed to provide a comprehensive interpretation of shape and form differences between individual gaits. The results show that older gaits are distinguishable from young gaits. A pictorial and numerical system is proposed which indicates whether the assessed gait is normal or abnormal depending on their total feature values. This offers several advantages: 1) it is user friendly and is easy to set up and implement; 2) it does not require complex equipment with segmentation of body parts; 3) it is relatively inexpensive and therefore increases its affordability decreasing health inequality; and 4) its versatility increases its usability at home supporting inclusivity of patients who are home bound. A digital transformation strategy framework is proposed where stakeholders such as patients, health care professionals and industry partners can collaborate through development of new technologies, value creation, structural change, affordability and sustainability to improve the diagnosis and treatment of gait abnormalities
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Sensorimotor embedding : a developmental approach to learning geometry
textA human infant facing the blooming, buzzing confusion of the senses grows up to be an adult with common-sense knowledge of geometry; this knowledge then allows her to describe the shapes of objects, the layouts of places, and the relative locations of things naturally and effortlessly. In robotics, such knowledge is usually built in by a human designer who needs to solve complex engineering problems of sensor calibration and inference. In contrast, this dissertation presents a model for how autonomous agents can form an understanding of geometry the same way infants do: by learning from early unstructured sensorimotor experience.
Through a framework called sensorimotor embedding, an agent reconstructs knowledge of its own sensor structure, the local geometry of the world, and the pose of objects within the world. The validity of this knowledge is demonstrated directly through Procrustes analysis and indirectly by using it to solve the mountain car task with different morphologies. The dissertation demonstrates how sensorimotor embedding can serve as a robust approach for acquiring geometric knowledge.Computer Science
Speaker Independent Acoustic-to-Articulatory Inversion
Acoustic-to-articulatory inversion, the determination of articulatory parameters from acoustic signals, is a difficult but important problem for many speech processing applications, such as automatic speech recognition (ASR) and computer aided pronunciation training (CAPT). In recent years, several approaches have been successfully implemented for speaker dependent models with parallel acoustic and kinematic training data. However, in many practical applications inversion is needed for new speakers for whom no articulatory data is available. In order to address this problem, this dissertation introduces a novel speaker adaptation approach called Parallel Reference Speaker Weighting (PRSW), based on parallel acoustic and articulatory Hidden Markov Models (HMM). This approach uses a robust normalized articulatory space and palate referenced articulatory features combined with speaker-weighted adaptation to form an inversion mapping for new speakers that can accurately estimate articulatory trajectories. The proposed PRSW method is evaluated on the newly collected Marquette electromagnetic articulography - Mandarin Accented English (EMA-MAE) corpus using 20 native English speakers. Cross-speaker inversion results show that given a good selection of reference speakers with consistent acoustic and articulatory patterns, the PRSW approach gives good speaker independent inversion performance even without kinematic training data
Etude de la calibration et de l'intégration sur mini-drone d'un système caméra-capteurs inertiels et magnétiques et ses applications
This thesis deal with the issue of the calibration of a group of sensor composedof an inertial unit, a magnetometer and a camera. It aims at integratingthem into a very compact system : a mini-drone. First of all, this study outlinesthe constraints imposed by the application on the choice of the sensors andthe solutions considered to solve the measures synchronization issue. Afterstudying existing calibration techniques, a method for the calibration of allthe sensors (accelerometer, gyroscope, magnetometer and camera) is presented.The proposed solution allows to estimate the frame transformation between thedifferent sensors. It has the advantage of not requiring the use of any specialequipment. Furthermore, the integration of these sensors into a compact systemraises new difficulties. Under these conditions, the magnetic fields created bythe drone actuators disrupt magnetometer measurements. A new method isproposed to estimate and compensate for these magnetic disturbances. Thecompensation is dynamically adapted based on the state of the drone actuators.Finally, two applications of the system including an inertial unit and a cameraare presented : the construction of geo-referenced images mosaic and videostabilization. Both applications use measurements of inertial sensors and precisecalibration to perform a real-time processing for a very low computational cost.Cette thèse aborde le problème de la calibration d’un ensemble de capteurscomposé d’une centrale inertielle, d’un magnétomètre et d’une caméra, avecpour objectif leur intégration sur un système très compact : un mini-drone.Cette étude expose tout d’abord les contraintes imposées par l’application surle choix des capteurs et les solutions envisagées notamment pour résoudre leproblème de la synchronisation des mesures. Après avoir étudié les techniquesde calibration existantes, une méthode permettant la calibration de l’ensembledes capteurs (accéléromètre, gyromètre, magnétomètre et caméra) est présentée.La solution proposée permet également d’estimer les changements de repèresentre les différents capteurs. Elle a la particularité de ne nécessiter l’emploid’aucun matériel particulier. D’autre part, l’intégration de ces capteurs dans unsystème aussi compact soulève de nouvelles difficultés. Dans ces conditions, leschamps magnétiques créés par les actionneurs du drone perturbent les mesuresdu magnétomètre se trouvant à proximité. Une nouvelle méthode est proposéeafin d’estimer et de compenser dynamiquement ces perturbations magnétiquesen fonction de l’état des actionneurs du drone. Enfin, deux applications dusystème comprenant une centrale inertielle et une caméra sont présentées :la construction de mosaïques d’images géo-référencées et la stabilisation devidéos. Ces deux applications exploitent les mesures des capteurs inertiels afind’effectuer un traitement en temps réel pour un coût calculatoire très faible
A Non-recursive Solution Method for Fixed-interval Smoothing Problems Applied to Short-term Inertial Navigation
This study focuses on short-term inertial navigation performed within a fixed time interval; one which is already over before the gathered data is processed. This yields a fixed-interval smoothing problem. The time interval is assumed to be short in order to simplify the equations related to inertial navigation without causing excessive errors to the estimates of attitude, velocity, and position, these values being the solutions to the problem. The aim is to develop a new solution method for applications of inertial navigation, particularly in sports, where the objective is often to ensure that the hardware can be integrated with the relevant equipment. This obviously imposes serious constraints on the size and mass of the used navigation system. Therefore, this study focuses on the use of consumer-grade sensors, and new calibration methods are also presented to improve the performance of such sensors.
The traditional approach to fixed-interval smoothing problems is based on the principle of combining two recursive filters, which are run forwards and backwards in time. This study, however, uses a non-recursive solution method. The advantages of this approach are best described with a single word: flexibility. Firstly, with this solution method there is no need to decide whether the fixed-interval smoothing problem is based on initial or boundary values, i.e. whether the ordinary differential equation describing the time evolution of the system is posed as an initial value problem or a boundary value problem. Secondly, it allows many forms of additional information to be used, which can be related to an arbitrary number of time instances. And thirdly, this solution method produces accurate results in the absence of any detailed knowledge of the involved errors.
The proposed non-recursive solution method uses a specific combination of the constructed state and observation equations in order to find a solution to the problem. The problem itself is expressed as a Tikhonov regularization problem, which allows one to obtain accurate results without detailed knowledge of the involved errors. When the problem is linear and the errors fulfill certain assumptions, the resulting solution is known to be the best linear unbiased estimator.
The main objective of this study is to construct a new solution method for fixed-interval smoothing problems; one which can be readily used in practical applications, where detailed knowledge of the involved errors is not available. The proposed solution method is presented in a detailed enough level to be implemented in a high-level environment such as Matlab. Therefore, the thesis also presents a reference implementation of an algorithm designed to solve linear fixed-interval smoothing problems. This thesis concludes by applying the proposed solution method to two sports in which such technology has not been used before
AAS/GSFC 13th International Symposium on Space Flight Dynamics
This conference proceedings preprint includes papers and abstracts presented at the 13th International Symposium on Space Flight Dynamics. Cosponsored by American Astronautical Society and the Guidance, Navigation and Control Center of the Goddard Space Flight Center, this symposium featured technical papers on a wide range of issues related to orbit-attitude prediction, determination, and control; attitude sensor calibration; attitude dynamics; and mission design
Advances in Spacecraft Systems and Orbit Determination
"Advances in Spacecraft Systems and Orbit Determinations", discusses the development of new technologies and the limitations of the present technology, used for interplanetary missions. Various experts have contributed to develop the bridge between present limitations and technology growth to overcome the limitations. Key features of this book inform us about the orbit determination techniques based on a smooth research based on astrophysics. The book also provides a detailed overview on Spacecraft Systems including reliability of low-cost AOCS, sliding mode controlling and a new view on attitude controller design based on sliding mode, with thrusters. It also provides a technological roadmap for HVAC optimization. The book also gives an excellent overview of resolving the difficulties for interplanetary missions with the comparison of present technologies and new advancements. Overall, this will be very much interesting book to explore the roadmap of technological growth in spacecraft systems