4.6 Article

Ground-Reaction-Force-Based Gait Analysis and Its Application to Gait Disorder Assessment: New Indices for Quantifying Walking Behavior

Journal

SENSORS
Volume 22, Issue 19, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/s22197558

Keywords

gait analysis; gait disorder; stroke; center of pressure; continuous gait phase; adaptive frequency oscillator; polar gaitogram; area ratio index

Funding

  1. Korea Institute of Science and Technology (KIST) Institutional Program [2E31110, 2E31642]
  2. National Research Foundation of Korea [2E31110] Funding Source: Korea Institute of Science & Technology Information (KISTI), National Science & Technology Information Service (NTIS)

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This paper proposes a method for assessing gait disorders by observing changes in the center of pressure during the gait cycle. The authors introduce a polar gaitogram and two indices, the area ratio index and the slope of the tangential line, as objective measures for gait analysis. Experimental results demonstrate the potential of using wearable devices to assess gait disorders and differentiate between stroke patients and healthy adults.
Gait assessment is an important tool for determining whether a person has a gait disorder. Existing gait analysis studies have a high error rate due to the heel-contact-event-based technique. Our goals were to overcome the shortcomings of existing gait analysis techniques and to develop more objective indices for assessing gait disorders. This paper proposes a method for assessing gait disorders via the observation of changes in the center of pressure (COP) in the medial-lateral direction, i.e., COPx, during the gait cycle. The data for the COPx were used to design a gait cycle estimation method applicable to patients with gait disorders. A polar gaitogram was drawn using the gait cycle and COPx data. The difference between the areas inside the two closed curves in the polar gaitogram, area ratio index (ARI), and the slope of the tangential line common to the two closed curves were proposed as gait analysis indices. An experimental study was conducted to verify that these two indices can be used to differentiate between stroke patients and healthy adults. The findings indicated the potential of using the proposed polar gaitogram and indices to develop and apply wearable devices to assess gait disorders.

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