DocumentCode :
1759244
Title :
A Head Impact Detection System Using SVM Classification and Proximity Sensing in an Instrumented Mouthguard
Author :
Wu, Lyndia C. ; Zarnescu, Livia ; Nangia, Vinay ; Cam, Bruce ; Camarillo, David B.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Bioeng., Stanford Univ., Stanford, CA, USA
Volume :
61
Issue :
11
fYear :
2014
fDate :
Nov. 2014
Firstpage :
2659
Lastpage :
2668
Abstract :
Injury from blunt head impacts causes acute neurological deficits and may lead to chronic neurodegeneration. A head impact detection device can serve both as a research tool for studying head injury mechanisms and a clinical tool for real-time trauma screening. The simplest approach is an acceleration thresholding algorithm, which may falsely detect high-acceleration spurious events such as manual manipulation of the device. We designed a head impact detection system that distinguishes head impacts from nonimpacts through two subsystems. First, we use infrared proximity sensing to determine if the mouthguard is worn on the teeth to filter out all off-teeth events. Second, on-teeth, nonimpact events are rejected using a support vector machine classifier trained on frequency domain features of linear acceleration and rotational velocity. The remaining events are classified as head impacts. In a controlled laboratory evaluation, the present system performed substantially better than a 10-g acceleration threshold in head impact detection (98% sensitivity, 99.99% specificity, 99% accuracy, and 99.98% precision, compared to 92% sensitivity, 58% specificity, 65% accuracy, and 37% precision). Once adapted for field deployment by training and validation with field data, this system has the potential to effectively detect head trauma in sports, military service, and other high-risk activities.
Keywords :
biomedical equipment; brain; dentistry; injuries; medical disorders; medical signal processing; neurophysiology; signal classification; support vector machines; SVM classification; acceleration thresholding algorithm; acute neurological deficits; blunt head impacts; controlled laboratory evaluation; frequency domain features; head impact detection device; head impact detection system; head injury mechanisms; head trauma; high-acceleration spurious events; high-risk activity; infrared proximity sensing; instrumented mouthguard; linear acceleration; military service; off-teeth events; proximity sensing; real-time trauma screening; rotational velocity; support vector machine classifier; Acceleration; Magnetic heads; Robot sensing systems; Support vector machines; Teeth; Impact detection; infrared proximity sensing; support vector machines (SVMs); traumatic brain injury;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Biomedical Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0018-9294
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/TBME.2014.2320153
Filename :
6805633
Link To Document :
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