Quantifying Turning Tasks with Wearable Sensors: A Reliability Assessment

Author:

Weston Angela R12,Antonellis Prokopios3,Fino Peter C4,Hoppes Carrie W2,Lester Mark E5,Weightman Margaret M6,Dibble Leland E1,King Laurie A3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Physical Therapy & Athletic Training , University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah , United States

2. Army-Baylor University Doctoral Program in Physical Therapy , Fort Sam Houston, Texas , United States

3. Department of Neurology , Oregon Health & Science University, Portland, Oregon , United States

4. Department of Health and Kinesiology , University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah , United States

5. Department of Physical Therapy , University of Texas Rio Grande Valley, Harlingen, Texas , United States

6. Courage Kenny Research Center-Allina Health , Minneapolis, Minnesota , United States

Abstract

Abstract Objective The aim of this study was to establish the test–retest reliability of metrics obtained from wearable inertial sensors that reflect turning performance during tasks designed to imitate various turns in daily activity. Methods Seventy-one adults who were healthy completed 3 turning tasks: a 1-minute walk along a 6-m walkway, a modified Illinois Agility Test (mIAT), and a complex turning course (CTC). Peak axial turning and rotational velocity (yaw angular velocity) were extracted from wearable inertial sensors on the head, trunk, and lumbar spine. ICCs were established to assess the test–retest reliability of average peak turning speed for each task. Lap time was collected for reliability analysis as well. Results Turning speed across all tasks demonstrated good to excellent reliability, with the highest reliability noted for the CTC (45-degree turns: ICC = 0.73–0.81; 90-degree turns: ICC = 0.71–0.83; and 135-degree turns: ICC = 0.72–0.80). The reliability of turning speed during 180-degree turns from the 1-minute walk was consistent across all body segments (ICC = 0.74–0.76). mIAT reliability ranged from fair to excellent (end turns: ICC = 0.52–0.72; mid turns: ICC = 0.50–0.56; and slalom turns: ICC = 0.66–0.84). The CTC average lap time demonstrated good test–retest reliability (ICC = 0.69), and the mIAT average lap time test–retest reliability was excellent (ICC = 0.91). Conclusions Turning speed measured by inertial sensors is a reliable outcome across a variety of ecologically valid turning tasks that can be easily tested in a clinical environment. Impact Turning performance is a reliable and important measure that should be included in clinical assessments and clinical trials.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation

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