论文标题

一项针对健康志愿者中面部肌肉和眼睛运动任务的可耳式设备的试点研究

A pilot study of the Earable device to measure facial muscle and eye movement tasks among healthy volunteers

论文作者

Wipperman, Matthew F., Pogoncheff, Galen, Mateo, Katrina F., Wu, Xuefang, Chen, Yiziying, Levy, Oren, Avbersek, Andreja, Deterding, Robin R., Hamon, Sara C., Vu, Tam, Alaj, Rinol, Harari, Olivier

论文摘要

许多神经肌肉疾病会损害颅神经释放的肌肉的功能。颅骨功能的临床评估有多个局限性。症状的临床医生评分患有评估者间差异,定性或半定量评分,以及捕获不经常或波动症状的能力有限。患者报告的结果受到召回偏见和精度差的限制。当前测量口面和动眼功能的工具很麻烦,难以实施且不容易。在这里,我们展示了可穿戴设备的可穿戴设备,可以区分某些颅骨活动,例如咀嚼,说话和吞咽。我们使用来自10位健康参与者的试点研究的数据证明了如何使用Earble可用于测量在临床研究中广泛利用的模拟性能结果评估(模拟性绩效)的受试者的EMG,EEG和EOG波形的特征。我们的分析管道提供了一个框架,以计算过程中的计算过程和统计上的可耳式设备对特征进行排名。最后,我们证明可使用可耳数据来对这些活动进行分类。我们的结果是在健康参与者的试点研究中进行的,为可穿戴传感器数据的设计,开发和分析提供了更全面的策略,以研究临床人群。此外,这项研究的结果还支持在临床研究环境中进一步评估可耳或类似设备作为客观测量颅骨活动的工具。未来的工作将在临床疾病人群中进行,重点是检测疾病特征,并监测受试者内治疗反应。可穿戴传感器设备的可用定量指标,例如可耳式支撑策略,用于开发新型数字终点,这是临床研究的标志目标。

Many neuromuscular disorders impair function of cranial nerve enervated muscles. Clinical assessment of cranial muscle function has several limitations. Clinician rating of symptoms suffers from inter-rater variation, qualitative or semi-quantitative scoring, and limited ability to capture infrequent or fluctuating symptoms. Patient-reported outcomes are limited by recall bias and poor precision. Current tools to measure orofacial and oculomotor function are cumbersome, difficult to implement, and non-portable. Here, we show how Earable, a wearable device, can discriminate certain cranial muscle activities such as chewing, talking, and swallowing. We demonstrate using data from a pilot study of 10 healthy participants how Earable can be used to measure features from EMG, EEG, and EOG waveforms from subjects performing mock Performance Outcome Assessments (mock-PerfOs), utilized widely in clinical research. Our analysis pipeline provides a framework for how to computationally process and statistically rank features from the Earable device. Finally, we demonstrate that Earable data may be used to classify these activities. Our results, conducted in a pilot study of healthy participants, enable a more comprehensive strategy for the design, development, and analysis of wearable sensor data for investigating clinical populations. Additionally, the results from this study support further evaluation of Earable or similar devices as tools to objectively measure cranial muscle activity in the context of a clinical research setting. Future work will be conducted in clinical disease populations, with a focus on detecting disease signatures, as well as monitoring intra-subject treatment responses. Readily available quantitative metrics from wearable sensor devices like Earable support strategies for the development of novel digital endpoints, a hallmark goal of clinical research.

扫码加入交流群

加入微信交流群

微信交流群二维码

扫码加入学术交流群,获取更多资源