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Assessing Respiratory Activity by Using IMUs: Modeling and Validation.

Vito MonacoCarolina GiustinoniTommaso CiapettiAlessandro MaselliCesare Stefanini
Published in: Sensors (Basel, Switzerland) (2022)
This study aimed to explore novel inertial measurement unit (IMU)-based strategies to estimate respiratory parameters in healthy adults lying on a bed while breathing normally. During the experimental sessions, the kinematics of the chest wall were contemporaneously collected through both a network of 9 IMUs and a set of 45 uniformly distributed reflective markers. All inertial kinematics were analyzed to identify a minimum set of signals and IMUs whose linear combination best matched the tidal volume measured by optoelectronic plethysmography. The resulting models were finally tuned and validated through a leave-one-out cross-validation approach to assess the extent to which they could accurately estimate a set of respiratory parameters related to three trunk compartments. The adopted methodological approach allowed us to identify two different models. The first, referred to as Model 1 , relies on the 3D acceleration measured by three IMUs located on the abdominal compartment and on the lower costal margin. The second, referred to as Model 2 , relies on only one component of the acceleration measured by two IMUs located on the abdominal compartment. Both models can accurately estimate the respiratory rate (relative error < 1.5%). Conversely, the duration of the respiratory phases and the tidal volume can be more accurately assessed by Model 2 (relative error < 5%) and Model 1 (relative error < 5%), respectively. We further discuss possible approaches to overcome limitations and improve the overall accuracy of the proposed approach.
Keyphrases
  • respiratory tract
  • network analysis