STAPP

SpatioTemporal Analysis of Plantar Pressure Measurements using Statistical Parametric Mapping

Journal Article (2018)
Author(s)

Brian G. Booth (Universiteit Antwerpen)

Noël L.W. Keijsers (Sint Maartenskliniek, Nijmegen)

Jan Sijbers (Universiteit Antwerpen)

T. Huysmans (Universiteit Antwerpen, TU Delft - Human Factors)

Research Group
Human Factors
Copyright
© 2018 Brian G. Booth, Noël L.W. Keijsers, Jan Sijbers, T. Huysmans
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gaitpost.2018.04.029
More Info
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Publication Year
2018
Language
English
Copyright
© 2018 Brian G. Booth, Noël L.W. Keijsers, Jan Sijbers, T. Huysmans
Research Group
Human Factors
Volume number
63
Pages (from-to)
268-275
Reuse Rights

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Abstract


Background

Pedobarography produces large sets of plantar pressure samples that are routinely subsampled (e.g. using regions of interest) or aggregated (e.g. center of pressure trajectories, peak pressure images) in order to simplify statistical analysis and provide intuitive clinical measures.

Research Question

We hypothesize that these data reductions discard gait information that can be used to differentiate between groups or conditions.


Methods

To test the hypothesis of null information loss, we created an implementation of statistical parametric mapping (SPM) for dynamic plantar pressure datasets (i.e. plantar pressure videos). Our SPM software framework brings all plantar pressure videos into anatomical and temporal correspondence, then performs statistical tests at each sampling location in space and time. Novelly, we introduce non-linear temporal registration into the framework in order to normalize for timing differences within the stance phase. We refer to our software framework as STAPP: spatiotemporal analysis of plantar pressure measurements. Using STAPP, we tested our hypothesis on plantar pressure videos from 33 healthy subjects walking at different speeds.

Results

As walking speed increased, STAPP was able to identify significant decreases in plantar pressure at mid-stance from the heel through the lateral forefoot. The extent of these plantar pressure decreases have not previously been observed using existing plantar pressure analysis techniques.

Significance

We therefore conclude that the subsampling of plantar pressure videos - a task which led to the discarding of gait information in our study - can be avoided using STAPP.

Files

STAPP.pdf
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- Embargo expired in 26-05-2019