Cargando…

Detecting Motor Impairment in Early Parkinson’s Disease via Natural Typing Interaction With Keyboards: Validation of the neuroQWERTY Approach in an Uncontrolled At-Home Setting

BACKGROUND: Parkinson’s disease (PD) is the second most prevalent neurodegenerative disease and one of the most common forms of movement disorder. Although there is no known cure for PD, existing therapies can provide effective symptomatic relief. However, optimal titration is crucial to avoid adver...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Arroyo-Gallego, Teresa, Ledesma-Carbayo, María J, Butterworth, Ian, Matarazzo, Michele, Montero-Escribano, Paloma, Puertas-Martín, Verónica, Gray, Martha L, Giancardo, Luca, Sánchez-Ferro, Álvaro
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: JMIR Publications 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5891671/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29581092
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/jmir.9462
_version_ 1783313042504679424
author Arroyo-Gallego, Teresa
Ledesma-Carbayo, María J
Butterworth, Ian
Matarazzo, Michele
Montero-Escribano, Paloma
Puertas-Martín, Verónica
Gray, Martha L
Giancardo, Luca
Sánchez-Ferro, Álvaro
author_facet Arroyo-Gallego, Teresa
Ledesma-Carbayo, María J
Butterworth, Ian
Matarazzo, Michele
Montero-Escribano, Paloma
Puertas-Martín, Verónica
Gray, Martha L
Giancardo, Luca
Sánchez-Ferro, Álvaro
author_sort Arroyo-Gallego, Teresa
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Parkinson’s disease (PD) is the second most prevalent neurodegenerative disease and one of the most common forms of movement disorder. Although there is no known cure for PD, existing therapies can provide effective symptomatic relief. However, optimal titration is crucial to avoid adverse effects. Today, decision making for PD management is challenging because it relies on subjective clinical evaluations that require a visit to the clinic. This challenge has motivated recent research initiatives to develop tools that can be used by nonspecialists to assess psychomotor impairment. Among these emerging solutions, we recently reported the neuroQWERTY index, a new digital marker able to detect motor impairment in an early PD cohort through the analysis of the key press and release timing data collected during a controlled in-clinic typing task. OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to extend the in-clinic implementation to an at-home implementation by validating the applicability of the neuroQWERTY approach in an uncontrolled at-home setting, using the typing data from subjects’ natural interaction with their laptop to enable remote and unobtrusive assessment of PD signs. METHODS: We implemented the data-collection platform and software to enable access and storage of the typing data generated by users while using their computer at home. We recruited a total of 60 participants; of these participants 52 (25 people with Parkinson’s and 27 healthy controls) provided enough data to complete the analysis. Finally, to evaluate whether our in-clinic-built algorithm could be used in an uncontrolled at-home setting, we compared its performance on the data collected during the controlled typing task in the clinic and the results of our method using the data passively collected at home. RESULTS: Despite the randomness and sparsity introduced by the uncontrolled setting, our algorithm performed nearly as well in the at-home data (area under the receiver operating characteristic curve [AUC] of 0.76 and sensitivity/specificity of 0.73/0.69) as it did when used to evaluate the in-clinic data (AUC 0.83 and sensitivity/specificity of 0.77/0.72). Moreover, the keystroke metrics presented a strong correlation between the 2 typing settings, which suggests a minimal influence of the in-clinic typing task in users’ normal typing. CONCLUSIONS: The finding that an algorithm trained on data from an in-clinic setting has comparable performance with that tested on data collected through naturalistic at-home computer use reinforces the hypothesis that subtle differences in motor function can be detected from typing behavior. This work represents another step toward an objective, user-convenient, and quasi-continuous monitoring tool for PD.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-5891671
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2018
publisher JMIR Publications
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-58916712018-04-16 Detecting Motor Impairment in Early Parkinson’s Disease via Natural Typing Interaction With Keyboards: Validation of the neuroQWERTY Approach in an Uncontrolled At-Home Setting Arroyo-Gallego, Teresa Ledesma-Carbayo, María J Butterworth, Ian Matarazzo, Michele Montero-Escribano, Paloma Puertas-Martín, Verónica Gray, Martha L Giancardo, Luca Sánchez-Ferro, Álvaro J Med Internet Res Original Paper BACKGROUND: Parkinson’s disease (PD) is the second most prevalent neurodegenerative disease and one of the most common forms of movement disorder. Although there is no known cure for PD, existing therapies can provide effective symptomatic relief. However, optimal titration is crucial to avoid adverse effects. Today, decision making for PD management is challenging because it relies on subjective clinical evaluations that require a visit to the clinic. This challenge has motivated recent research initiatives to develop tools that can be used by nonspecialists to assess psychomotor impairment. Among these emerging solutions, we recently reported the neuroQWERTY index, a new digital marker able to detect motor impairment in an early PD cohort through the analysis of the key press and release timing data collected during a controlled in-clinic typing task. OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to extend the in-clinic implementation to an at-home implementation by validating the applicability of the neuroQWERTY approach in an uncontrolled at-home setting, using the typing data from subjects’ natural interaction with their laptop to enable remote and unobtrusive assessment of PD signs. METHODS: We implemented the data-collection platform and software to enable access and storage of the typing data generated by users while using their computer at home. We recruited a total of 60 participants; of these participants 52 (25 people with Parkinson’s and 27 healthy controls) provided enough data to complete the analysis. Finally, to evaluate whether our in-clinic-built algorithm could be used in an uncontrolled at-home setting, we compared its performance on the data collected during the controlled typing task in the clinic and the results of our method using the data passively collected at home. RESULTS: Despite the randomness and sparsity introduced by the uncontrolled setting, our algorithm performed nearly as well in the at-home data (area under the receiver operating characteristic curve [AUC] of 0.76 and sensitivity/specificity of 0.73/0.69) as it did when used to evaluate the in-clinic data (AUC 0.83 and sensitivity/specificity of 0.77/0.72). Moreover, the keystroke metrics presented a strong correlation between the 2 typing settings, which suggests a minimal influence of the in-clinic typing task in users’ normal typing. CONCLUSIONS: The finding that an algorithm trained on data from an in-clinic setting has comparable performance with that tested on data collected through naturalistic at-home computer use reinforces the hypothesis that subtle differences in motor function can be detected from typing behavior. This work represents another step toward an objective, user-convenient, and quasi-continuous monitoring tool for PD. JMIR Publications 2018-03-26 /pmc/articles/PMC5891671/ /pubmed/29581092 http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/jmir.9462 Text en ©Teresa Arroyo-Gallego, María J Ledesma-Carbayo, Ian Butterworth, Michele Matarazzo, Paloma Montero-Escribano, Verónica Puertas-Martín, Martha L Gray, Luca Giancardo, Álvaro Sánchez-Ferro. Originally published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research (http://www.jmir.org), 26.03.2018. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work, first published in the Journal of Medical Internet Research, is properly cited. The complete bibliographic information, a link to the original publication on http://www.jmir.org/, as well as this copyright and license information must be included.
spellingShingle Original Paper
Arroyo-Gallego, Teresa
Ledesma-Carbayo, María J
Butterworth, Ian
Matarazzo, Michele
Montero-Escribano, Paloma
Puertas-Martín, Verónica
Gray, Martha L
Giancardo, Luca
Sánchez-Ferro, Álvaro
Detecting Motor Impairment in Early Parkinson’s Disease via Natural Typing Interaction With Keyboards: Validation of the neuroQWERTY Approach in an Uncontrolled At-Home Setting
title Detecting Motor Impairment in Early Parkinson’s Disease via Natural Typing Interaction With Keyboards: Validation of the neuroQWERTY Approach in an Uncontrolled At-Home Setting
title_full Detecting Motor Impairment in Early Parkinson’s Disease via Natural Typing Interaction With Keyboards: Validation of the neuroQWERTY Approach in an Uncontrolled At-Home Setting
title_fullStr Detecting Motor Impairment in Early Parkinson’s Disease via Natural Typing Interaction With Keyboards: Validation of the neuroQWERTY Approach in an Uncontrolled At-Home Setting
title_full_unstemmed Detecting Motor Impairment in Early Parkinson’s Disease via Natural Typing Interaction With Keyboards: Validation of the neuroQWERTY Approach in an Uncontrolled At-Home Setting
title_short Detecting Motor Impairment in Early Parkinson’s Disease via Natural Typing Interaction With Keyboards: Validation of the neuroQWERTY Approach in an Uncontrolled At-Home Setting
title_sort detecting motor impairment in early parkinson’s disease via natural typing interaction with keyboards: validation of the neuroqwerty approach in an uncontrolled at-home setting
topic Original Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5891671/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29581092
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/jmir.9462
work_keys_str_mv AT arroyogallegoteresa detectingmotorimpairmentinearlyparkinsonsdiseasevianaturaltypinginteractionwithkeyboardsvalidationoftheneuroqwertyapproachinanuncontrolledathomesetting
AT ledesmacarbayomariaj detectingmotorimpairmentinearlyparkinsonsdiseasevianaturaltypinginteractionwithkeyboardsvalidationoftheneuroqwertyapproachinanuncontrolledathomesetting
AT butterworthian detectingmotorimpairmentinearlyparkinsonsdiseasevianaturaltypinginteractionwithkeyboardsvalidationoftheneuroqwertyapproachinanuncontrolledathomesetting
AT matarazzomichele detectingmotorimpairmentinearlyparkinsonsdiseasevianaturaltypinginteractionwithkeyboardsvalidationoftheneuroqwertyapproachinanuncontrolledathomesetting
AT monteroescribanopaloma detectingmotorimpairmentinearlyparkinsonsdiseasevianaturaltypinginteractionwithkeyboardsvalidationoftheneuroqwertyapproachinanuncontrolledathomesetting
AT puertasmartinveronica detectingmotorimpairmentinearlyparkinsonsdiseasevianaturaltypinginteractionwithkeyboardsvalidationoftheneuroqwertyapproachinanuncontrolledathomesetting
AT graymarthal detectingmotorimpairmentinearlyparkinsonsdiseasevianaturaltypinginteractionwithkeyboardsvalidationoftheneuroqwertyapproachinanuncontrolledathomesetting
AT giancardoluca detectingmotorimpairmentinearlyparkinsonsdiseasevianaturaltypinginteractionwithkeyboardsvalidationoftheneuroqwertyapproachinanuncontrolledathomesetting
AT sanchezferroalvaro detectingmotorimpairmentinearlyparkinsonsdiseasevianaturaltypinginteractionwithkeyboardsvalidationoftheneuroqwertyapproachinanuncontrolledathomesetting