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Preprint

A Multi-layer Gaussian Process for Motor Symptom Estimation in People with Parkinson's Disease

M. Lang[Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Technical University of Munich, Munich, Germany]Franz PfisterFaculty of Mathematics, Informatics and StatisticsLudwig-Maximilians-Universität MünchenJakob Fröhner[Department of Electrical and Computer EngineeringTechnical University of Munich]Kian Abedinpour[Department of Neurology and Clinical NeurophysiologyTechnical University of Munich]Daniel Pichler[Department of Neurology and Clinical NeurophysiologyTechnical University of Munich]Urban M. FietzekTerry Taewoong UmDana KulićSatoshi Endo[Department of Electrical and Computer EngineeringTechnical University of Munich]Sandra Hirche[Department of Electrical and Computer EngineeringTechnical University of Munich]
arXiv (Cornell University)repository2018en
ABI

Abstract

The assessment of Parkinson's disease (PD) poses a significant challenge as it is influenced by various factors which lead to a complex and fluctuating symptom manifestation. Thus, a frequent and objective PD assessment is highly valuable for effective health management of people with Parkinson's disease (PwP). Here, we propose a method for monitoring PwP by stochastically modeling the relationships between their wrist movements during unscripted daily activities and corresponding annotations about clinical displays of movement abnormalities. We approach the estimation of PD motor signs by independently modeling and hierarchically stacking Gaussian process models for three classes of commonly observed movement abnormalities in PwP including tremor, (non-tremulous) bradykinesia, and (non-tremulous) dyskinesia. We use clinically adopted severity measures as annotations for training the models, thus allowing our multi-layer Gaussian process prediction models to estimate not only their presence but also their severities. The experimental validation of our approach demonstrates strong agreement of the model predictions with these PD annotations. Our results show the proposed method produces promising results in objective monitoring of movement abnormalities of PD in the presence of arbitrary and unknown voluntary motions, and makes an important step towards continuous monitoring of PD in the home environment.

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