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Título
Multimodal video and IMU kinematic dataset on daily life activities using affordable devices
Autor
Año del Documento
2023-09-22
Editorial
Nature
Descripción
Producción Científica
Documento Fuente
Martínez-Zarzuela, M., González-Alonso, J., Antón-Rodríguez, M. et al. Multimodal video and IMU kinematic dataset on daily life activities using affordable devices. Sci Data 10, 648 (2023). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41597-023-02554-9
Résumé
Human activity recognition and clinical biomechanics are challenging problems in physical telerehabilitation medicine. However, most publicly available datasets on human body movements cannot be used to study both problems in an out-of-the-lab movement acquisition setting. The objective of the VIDIMU dataset is to pave the way towards affordable patient gross motor tracking solutions for daily life activities recognition and kinematic analysis. The dataset includes 13 activities registered using a commodity camera and five inertial sensors. The video recordings were acquired in 54 subjects, of which 16 also had simultaneous recordings of inertial sensors. The novelty of dataset lies in: (i) the clinical relevance of the chosen movements, (ii) the combined utilization of affordable video and custom sensors, and (iii) the implementation of state-of-the-art tools for multimodal data processing of 3D body pose tracking and motion reconstruction in a musculoskeletal model from inertial data. The validation confirms that a minimally disturbing acquisition protocol, performed according to real-life conditions can provide a comprehensive picture of human joint angles during daily life activities.
Revisión por pares
SI
Patrocinador
This research was partially funded by the funded by the Ministry of Science and Innovation of Spain under research grant “Rehabot: Smart assistant to complement and assess the physical rehabilitation of children with cerebral palsy in their natural environment”, with code 124515OA-100, and the mobility grant “Ayudas Movilidad Estancias Senior (Salvador Madariaga 2021)” with code PRX21/00612. Cristina Simon-Martinez is funded by the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation program under the Marie Sklodowska-Curie grant agreement No 890641 (“Optimizing Vision reHABilitation with virtual-reality games in paediatric amblyopia (V-HAB)”)
Idioma
eng
Tipo de versión
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
Derechos
openAccess
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