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Single camera multi-view anthropometric measurement of human height and mid-upper arm circumference using linear regression

BACKGROUND: Manually measured anthropometric quantities are used in many applications including human malnutrition assessment. Training is required to collect anthropometric measurements manually, which is not ideal in resource-constrained environments. Photogrammetric methods have been gaining atte...

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Autores principales: Liu, Yingying, Sowmya, Arcot, Khamis, Heba
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5896949/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29649306
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0195600
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author Liu, Yingying
Sowmya, Arcot
Khamis, Heba
author_facet Liu, Yingying
Sowmya, Arcot
Khamis, Heba
author_sort Liu, Yingying
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Manually measured anthropometric quantities are used in many applications including human malnutrition assessment. Training is required to collect anthropometric measurements manually, which is not ideal in resource-constrained environments. Photogrammetric methods have been gaining attention in recent years, due to the availability and affordability of digital cameras. OBJECTIVE: The primary goal is to demonstrate that height and mid-upper arm circumference (MUAC)–indicators of malnutrition–can be accurately estimated by applying linear regression to distance measurements from photographs of participants taken from five views, and determine the optimal view combinations. A secondary goal is to observe the effect on estimate error of two approaches which reduce complexity of the setup, computational requirements and the expertise required of the observer. METHODS: Thirty-one participants (11 female, 20 male; 18–37 years) were photographed from five views. Distances were computed using both camera calibration and reference object techniques from manually annotated photos. To estimate height, linear regression was applied to the distances between the top of the participants head and the floor, as well as the height of a bounding box enclosing the participant’s silhouette which eliminates the need to identify the floor. To estimate MUAC, linear regression was applied to the mid-upper arm width. Estimates were computed for all view combinations and performance was compared to other photogrammetric methods from the literature—linear distance method for height, and shape models for MUAC. RESULTS: The mean absolute difference (MAD) between the linear regression estimates and manual measurements were smaller compared to other methods. For the optimal view combinations (smallest MAD), the technical error of measurement and coefficient of reliability also indicate the linear regression methods are more reliable. The optimal view combination was the front and side views. When estimating height by linear regression of the distance from the head to the floor, the mean MAD was 10.51 mm ± 6.52 mm SD, and when estimating height from the bounding box using the reference object, the mean MAD per participant was 11.53 mm ± 6.43 mm SD. When estimating MUAC from the mid-upper arm radius using the reference object, the mean MAD was 7.24 mm ± 4.79 mm SD. The mean MAD for all methods when using camera calibration was 2–3 mm smaller. CONCLUSIONS: Applying linear regression to distance measurements from photos of adults taken from multiple view angles has been shown to accurately estimate height and MUAC to within the accuracy required for nutrition assessment. Future work will focus on automating the landmark detection, and validating the methods on populations that include undernourished adults and children of all nutrition statuses. These future works will improve the practicality of this method as a potential tool for nutrition assessment by novice users.
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spelling pubmed-58969492018-05-04 Single camera multi-view anthropometric measurement of human height and mid-upper arm circumference using linear regression Liu, Yingying Sowmya, Arcot Khamis, Heba PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Manually measured anthropometric quantities are used in many applications including human malnutrition assessment. Training is required to collect anthropometric measurements manually, which is not ideal in resource-constrained environments. Photogrammetric methods have been gaining attention in recent years, due to the availability and affordability of digital cameras. OBJECTIVE: The primary goal is to demonstrate that height and mid-upper arm circumference (MUAC)–indicators of malnutrition–can be accurately estimated by applying linear regression to distance measurements from photographs of participants taken from five views, and determine the optimal view combinations. A secondary goal is to observe the effect on estimate error of two approaches which reduce complexity of the setup, computational requirements and the expertise required of the observer. METHODS: Thirty-one participants (11 female, 20 male; 18–37 years) were photographed from five views. Distances were computed using both camera calibration and reference object techniques from manually annotated photos. To estimate height, linear regression was applied to the distances between the top of the participants head and the floor, as well as the height of a bounding box enclosing the participant’s silhouette which eliminates the need to identify the floor. To estimate MUAC, linear regression was applied to the mid-upper arm width. Estimates were computed for all view combinations and performance was compared to other photogrammetric methods from the literature—linear distance method for height, and shape models for MUAC. RESULTS: The mean absolute difference (MAD) between the linear regression estimates and manual measurements were smaller compared to other methods. For the optimal view combinations (smallest MAD), the technical error of measurement and coefficient of reliability also indicate the linear regression methods are more reliable. The optimal view combination was the front and side views. When estimating height by linear regression of the distance from the head to the floor, the mean MAD was 10.51 mm ± 6.52 mm SD, and when estimating height from the bounding box using the reference object, the mean MAD per participant was 11.53 mm ± 6.43 mm SD. When estimating MUAC from the mid-upper arm radius using the reference object, the mean MAD was 7.24 mm ± 4.79 mm SD. The mean MAD for all methods when using camera calibration was 2–3 mm smaller. CONCLUSIONS: Applying linear regression to distance measurements from photos of adults taken from multiple view angles has been shown to accurately estimate height and MUAC to within the accuracy required for nutrition assessment. Future work will focus on automating the landmark detection, and validating the methods on populations that include undernourished adults and children of all nutrition statuses. These future works will improve the practicality of this method as a potential tool for nutrition assessment by novice users. Public Library of Science 2018-04-12 /pmc/articles/PMC5896949/ /pubmed/29649306 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0195600 Text en © 2018 Liu et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Liu, Yingying
Sowmya, Arcot
Khamis, Heba
Single camera multi-view anthropometric measurement of human height and mid-upper arm circumference using linear regression
title Single camera multi-view anthropometric measurement of human height and mid-upper arm circumference using linear regression
title_full Single camera multi-view anthropometric measurement of human height and mid-upper arm circumference using linear regression
title_fullStr Single camera multi-view anthropometric measurement of human height and mid-upper arm circumference using linear regression
title_full_unstemmed Single camera multi-view anthropometric measurement of human height and mid-upper arm circumference using linear regression
title_short Single camera multi-view anthropometric measurement of human height and mid-upper arm circumference using linear regression
title_sort single camera multi-view anthropometric measurement of human height and mid-upper arm circumference using linear regression
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5896949/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29649306
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0195600
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