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Proposal for Post Hoc Quality Control in Instrumented Motion Analysis Using Markerless Motion Capture: Development and Usability Study

BACKGROUND: Instrumented assessment of motor symptoms has emerged as a promising extension to the clinical assessment of several movement disorders. The use of mobile and inexpensive technologies such as some markerless motion capture technologies is especially promising for large-scale application...

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Autores principales: Röhling, Hanna Marie, Althoff, Patrik, Arsenova, Radina, Drebinger, Daniel, Gigengack, Norman, Chorschew, Anna, Kroneberg, Daniel, Rönnefarth, Maria, Ellermeyer, Tobias, Rosenkranz, Sina Cathérine, Heesen, Christoph, Behnia, Behnoush, Hirano, Shigeki, Kuwabara, Satoshi, Paul, Friedemann, Brandt, Alexander Ulrich, Schmitz-Hübsch, Tanja
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: JMIR Publications 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9015782/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35363150
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/26825
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author Röhling, Hanna Marie
Althoff, Patrik
Arsenova, Radina
Drebinger, Daniel
Gigengack, Norman
Chorschew, Anna
Kroneberg, Daniel
Rönnefarth, Maria
Ellermeyer, Tobias
Rosenkranz, Sina Cathérine
Heesen, Christoph
Behnia, Behnoush
Hirano, Shigeki
Kuwabara, Satoshi
Paul, Friedemann
Brandt, Alexander Ulrich
Schmitz-Hübsch, Tanja
author_facet Röhling, Hanna Marie
Althoff, Patrik
Arsenova, Radina
Drebinger, Daniel
Gigengack, Norman
Chorschew, Anna
Kroneberg, Daniel
Rönnefarth, Maria
Ellermeyer, Tobias
Rosenkranz, Sina Cathérine
Heesen, Christoph
Behnia, Behnoush
Hirano, Shigeki
Kuwabara, Satoshi
Paul, Friedemann
Brandt, Alexander Ulrich
Schmitz-Hübsch, Tanja
author_sort Röhling, Hanna Marie
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Instrumented assessment of motor symptoms has emerged as a promising extension to the clinical assessment of several movement disorders. The use of mobile and inexpensive technologies such as some markerless motion capture technologies is especially promising for large-scale application but has not transitioned into clinical routine to date. A crucial step on this path is to implement standardized, clinically applicable tools that identify and control for quality concerns. OBJECTIVE: The main goal of this study comprises the development of a systematic quality control (QC) procedure for data collected with markerless motion capture technology and its experimental implementation to identify specific quality concerns and thereby rate the usability of recordings. METHODS: We developed a post hoc QC pipeline that was evaluated using a large set of short motor task recordings of healthy controls (2010 recordings from 162 subjects) and people with multiple sclerosis (2682 recordings from 187 subjects). For each of these recordings, 2 raters independently applied the pipeline. They provided overall usability decisions and identified technical and performance-related quality concerns, which yielded respective proportions of their occurrence as a main result. RESULTS: The approach developed here has proven user-friendly and applicable on a large scale. Raters’ decisions on recording usability were concordant in 71.5%-92.3% of cases, depending on the motor task. Furthermore, 39.6%-85.1% of recordings were concordantly rated as being of satisfactory quality whereas in 5.0%-26.3%, both raters agreed to discard the recording. CONCLUSIONS: We present a QC pipeline that seems feasible and useful for instant quality screening in the clinical setting. Results confirm the need of QC despite using standard test setups, testing protocols, and operator training for the employed system and by extension, for other task-based motor assessment technologies. Results of the QC process can be used to clean existing data sets, optimize quality assurance measures, as well as foster the development of automated QC approaches and therefore improve the overall reliability of kinematic data sets.
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spelling pubmed-90157822022-04-19 Proposal for Post Hoc Quality Control in Instrumented Motion Analysis Using Markerless Motion Capture: Development and Usability Study Röhling, Hanna Marie Althoff, Patrik Arsenova, Radina Drebinger, Daniel Gigengack, Norman Chorschew, Anna Kroneberg, Daniel Rönnefarth, Maria Ellermeyer, Tobias Rosenkranz, Sina Cathérine Heesen, Christoph Behnia, Behnoush Hirano, Shigeki Kuwabara, Satoshi Paul, Friedemann Brandt, Alexander Ulrich Schmitz-Hübsch, Tanja JMIR Hum Factors Original Paper BACKGROUND: Instrumented assessment of motor symptoms has emerged as a promising extension to the clinical assessment of several movement disorders. The use of mobile and inexpensive technologies such as some markerless motion capture technologies is especially promising for large-scale application but has not transitioned into clinical routine to date. A crucial step on this path is to implement standardized, clinically applicable tools that identify and control for quality concerns. OBJECTIVE: The main goal of this study comprises the development of a systematic quality control (QC) procedure for data collected with markerless motion capture technology and its experimental implementation to identify specific quality concerns and thereby rate the usability of recordings. METHODS: We developed a post hoc QC pipeline that was evaluated using a large set of short motor task recordings of healthy controls (2010 recordings from 162 subjects) and people with multiple sclerosis (2682 recordings from 187 subjects). For each of these recordings, 2 raters independently applied the pipeline. They provided overall usability decisions and identified technical and performance-related quality concerns, which yielded respective proportions of their occurrence as a main result. RESULTS: The approach developed here has proven user-friendly and applicable on a large scale. Raters’ decisions on recording usability were concordant in 71.5%-92.3% of cases, depending on the motor task. Furthermore, 39.6%-85.1% of recordings were concordantly rated as being of satisfactory quality whereas in 5.0%-26.3%, both raters agreed to discard the recording. CONCLUSIONS: We present a QC pipeline that seems feasible and useful for instant quality screening in the clinical setting. Results confirm the need of QC despite using standard test setups, testing protocols, and operator training for the employed system and by extension, for other task-based motor assessment technologies. Results of the QC process can be used to clean existing data sets, optimize quality assurance measures, as well as foster the development of automated QC approaches and therefore improve the overall reliability of kinematic data sets. JMIR Publications 2022-04-01 /pmc/articles/PMC9015782/ /pubmed/35363150 http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/26825 Text en ©Hanna Marie Röhling, Patrik Althoff, Radina Arsenova, Daniel Drebinger, Norman Gigengack, Anna Chorschew, Daniel Kroneberg, Maria Rönnefarth, Tobias Ellermeyer, Sina Cathérine Rosenkranz, Christoph Heesen, Behnoush Behnia, Shigeki Hirano, Satoshi Kuwabara, Friedemann Paul, Alexander Ulrich Brandt, Tanja Schmitz-Hübsch. Originally published in JMIR Human Factors (https://humanfactors.jmir.org), 01.04.2022. 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 JMIR Human Factors, is properly cited. The complete bibliographic information, a link to the original publication on https://humanfactors.jmir.org, as well as this copyright and license information must be included.
spellingShingle Original Paper
Röhling, Hanna Marie
Althoff, Patrik
Arsenova, Radina
Drebinger, Daniel
Gigengack, Norman
Chorschew, Anna
Kroneberg, Daniel
Rönnefarth, Maria
Ellermeyer, Tobias
Rosenkranz, Sina Cathérine
Heesen, Christoph
Behnia, Behnoush
Hirano, Shigeki
Kuwabara, Satoshi
Paul, Friedemann
Brandt, Alexander Ulrich
Schmitz-Hübsch, Tanja
Proposal for Post Hoc Quality Control in Instrumented Motion Analysis Using Markerless Motion Capture: Development and Usability Study
title Proposal for Post Hoc Quality Control in Instrumented Motion Analysis Using Markerless Motion Capture: Development and Usability Study
title_full Proposal for Post Hoc Quality Control in Instrumented Motion Analysis Using Markerless Motion Capture: Development and Usability Study
title_fullStr Proposal for Post Hoc Quality Control in Instrumented Motion Analysis Using Markerless Motion Capture: Development and Usability Study
title_full_unstemmed Proposal for Post Hoc Quality Control in Instrumented Motion Analysis Using Markerless Motion Capture: Development and Usability Study
title_short Proposal for Post Hoc Quality Control in Instrumented Motion Analysis Using Markerless Motion Capture: Development and Usability Study
title_sort proposal for post hoc quality control in instrumented motion analysis using markerless motion capture: development and usability study
topic Original Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9015782/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35363150
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/26825
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