Using wearable inertial sensors to compare different versions of the dual task paradigm during walking

Harry J. Witchel, Robert Needham, Aoife Healy, Joseph H. Guppy, Jake Bush, Cäcilia Oberndorfer, Chantal Herberz, Carina E.I. Westling, Dawit Kim, Daniel Roggen, Jens Barth, Björn M. Eskofier, Waqar Rashid, Nachiappan Chockalingam, Jochen Klucken

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingConference contributionpeer-review

2 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

The dual task paradigm (DTP), where performance of a walking task co-occurs with a cognitive task to assess performance decrement, has been controversially mooted as a more suitable task to test safety from falls in outdoor and urban environments than simple walking in a hospital corridor. There are a variety of different cognitive tasks that have been used in the DTP, and we wanted to assess the use of a secondary task that requires mental tracking (the alternate letter alphabet task) against a more automatic working memory task (counting backward by ones). In this study we validated the x-io x-IMU wearable inertial sensors, used them to record healthy walking, and then used dynamic time warping to assess the elements of the gait cycle. In the timed 25 foot walk (T25FW) the alternate letter alphabet task lengthened the stride time significantly compared to ordinary walking, while counting backward did not. We conclude that adding a mental tracking task in a DTP will elicit performance decrement in healthy volunteers.

Original languageEnglish
Title of host publication35th Annual Conference of the European Association of Cognitive Ergonomics
Subtitle of host publicationTransforming the Everyday, ECCE 2017
PublisherAssociation for Computing Machinery, Inc
Pages150-157
Number of pages8
ISBN (Electronic)9781450352567
DOIs
Publication statusPublished (in print/issue) - 19 Sept 2017
Event35th Annual Conference of the European Association of Cognitive Ergonomics, ECCE 2017 - Umea, Sweden
Duration: 20 Sept 201722 Sept 2017

Publication series

NameACM International Conference Proceeding Series
VolumePart F131193

Conference

Conference35th Annual Conference of the European Association of Cognitive Ergonomics, ECCE 2017
Country/TerritorySweden
CityUmea
Period20/09/1722/09/17

Keywords

  • Accelerometer
  • Accelerometry
  • Ambulation
  • Ambulatory
  • Gyroscope
  • Inertial
  • MEMS
  • T25FW
  • X-io
  • XIMU
  • Xio

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