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A Machine Learning-Based Initial Difficulty Level Adjustment Method for Balance Exercise on a Trunk Rehabilitation Robot

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Abstract
Trunk rehabilitation exercises such as those for remediating core stability can help improve the seated balance of patients with weakness or loss of proprioception caused by diseases such as stroke, and aid the recovery of other functions such as gait. However, there has not yet been any reported method for automatically determining the parameters that define exercise difficulty on a trunk rehabilitation robot (TRR) based on data such as the patient's demographic information, balancing ability, and training sequence, etc. We have proposed a machine learning (ML)-based difficulty adjustment method to determine an appropriate virtual damping gain (Dvirtual) of the controller for the TRR's unstable training mode. Training data for the proposed system is obtained from 37 healthy young adults, and the trained ML model thus obtained is tested through experiments with a separate population of 25 healthy young adults. The leave-one-out cross validation results (37 subjects) from the training group for validation of the designed ML model showed 80.90% average accuracy (R2 score) for using the given information to predict the desired difficulty levels, which are represented by the level of balance performance quantified as Mean Velocity Displacement (MVD) of the center of pressure. Statistical analysis (Repeated measures analysis of variance) of subject performance also showed that ground truth difficulty levels from the training data and predicted difficulty levels did not differ significantly under any of the three exercise modes used in this study (Hard, Medium, and Easy), and the standard deviations were reduced by 16.39, 41.39, and 25.68%, respectively. Moreover, the Planar Deviation (PD) of the center of pressure, which was not the target parameter here, also showed results similar to the MVD, which indicates that the predicted Dvirtual affected the difficulty level of balance performance. Therefore, the proposed ML model-based difficulty adjustment method has potential for use with people who have varied balancing abilities. © 2001-2011 IEEE.
Author(s)
Lee, HosuChoi, YunhoEizad, A.Song, W.-K.Kim, Kyung-JoongYoon, Jungwon
Issued Date
2023-03
Type
Article
DOI
10.1109/TNSRE.2023.3260815
URI
https://scholar.gist.ac.kr/handle/local/10298
Publisher
Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc.
Citation
IEEE Transactions on Neural Systems and Rehabilitation Engineering, v.31, pp.1857 - 1866
ISSN
1534-4320
Appears in Collections:
Department of AI Convergence > 1. Journal Articles
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