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1.
JMIR Res Protoc ; 11(6): e12506, 2022 Jun 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35648455

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Rapid advances in technologies over the past 10 years have enabled large-scale biomedical and psychosocial rehabilitation research to improve the function and social integration of persons with physical impairments across the lifespan. The Biomedical Research and Informatics Living Laboratory for Innovative Advances of New Technologies (BRILLIANT) in community mobility rehabilitation aims to generate evidence-based research to improve rehabilitation for individuals with acquired brain injury (ABI). OBJECTIVE: This study aims to (1) identify the factors limiting or enhancing mobility in real-world community environments (public spaces, including the mall, home, and outdoors) and understand their complex interplay in individuals of all ages with ABI and (2) customize community environment mobility training by identifying, on a continuous basis, the specific rehabilitation strategies and interventions that patient subgroups benefit from most. Here, we present the research and technology plan for the BRILLIANT initiative. METHODS: A cohort of individuals, adults and children, with ABI (N=1500) will be recruited. Patients will be recruited from the acute care and rehabilitation partner centers within 4 health regions (living labs) and followed throughout the continuum of rehabilitation. Participants will also be recruited from the community. Biomedical, clinician-reported, patient-reported, and brain imaging data will be collected. Theme 1 will implement and evaluate the feasibility of collecting data across BRILLIANT living labs and conduct predictive analyses and artificial intelligence (AI) to identify mobility subgroups. Theme 2 will implement, evaluate, and identify community mobility interventions that optimize outcomes for mobility subgroups of patients with ABI. RESULTS: The biomedical infrastructure and equipment have been established across the living labs, and development of the clinician- and patient-reported outcome digital solutions is underway. Recruitment is expected to begin in May 2022. CONCLUSIONS: The program will develop and deploy a comprehensive clinical and community-based mobility-monitoring system to evaluate the factors that result in poor mobility, and develop personalized mobility interventions that are optimized for specific patient subgroups. Technology solutions will be designed to support clinicians and patients to deliver cost-effective care and the right intervention to the right person at the right time to optimize long-term functional potential and meaningful participation in the community. INTERNATIONAL REGISTERED REPORT IDENTIFIER (IRRID): PRR1-10.2196/12506.

2.
ArXiv ; 2021 Jan 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33469559

ABSTRACT

The rapid spread of COVID-19 cases in recent months has strained hospital resources, making rapid and accurate triage of patients presenting to emergency departments a necessity. Machine learning techniques using clinical data such as chest X-rays have been used to predict which patients are most at risk of deterioration. We consider the task of predicting two types of patient deterioration based on chest X-rays: adverse event deterioration (i.e., transfer to the intensive care unit, intubation, or mortality) and increased oxygen requirements beyond 6 L per day. Due to the relative scarcity of COVID-19 patient data, existing solutions leverage supervised pretraining on related non-COVID images, but this is limited by the differences between the pretraining data and the target COVID-19 patient data. In this paper, we use self-supervised learning based on the momentum contrast (MoCo) method in the pretraining phase to learn more general image representations to use for downstream tasks. We present three results. The first is deterioration prediction from a single image, where our model achieves an area under receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC) of 0.742 for predicting an adverse event within 96 hours (compared to 0.703 with supervised pretraining) and an AUC of 0.765 for predicting oxygen requirements greater than 6 L a day at 24 hours (compared to 0.749 with supervised pretraining). We then propose a new transformer-based architecture that can process sequences of multiple images for prediction and show that this model can achieve an improved AUC of 0.786 for predicting an adverse event at 96 hours and an AUC of 0.848 for predicting mortalities at 96 hours. A small pilot clinical study suggested that the prediction accuracy of our model is comparable to that of experienced radiologists analyzing the same information.

4.
PLoS Med ; 17(7): e1003152, 2020 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32614825

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Since screening programs identify only a small proportion of the population as eligible for an intervention, genomic prediction of heritable risk factors could decrease the number needing to be screened by removing individuals at low genetic risk. We therefore tested whether a polygenic risk score for heel quantitative ultrasound speed of sound (SOS)-a heritable risk factor for osteoporotic fracture-can identify low-risk individuals who can safely be excluded from a fracture risk screening program. METHODS AND FINDINGS: A polygenic risk score for SOS was trained and selected in 2 separate subsets of UK Biobank (comprising 341,449 and 5,335 individuals). The top-performing prediction model was termed "gSOS", and its utility in fracture risk screening was tested in 5 validation cohorts using the National Osteoporosis Guideline Group clinical guidelines (N = 10,522 eligible participants). All individuals were genome-wide genotyped and had measured fracture risk factors. Across the 5 cohorts, the average age ranged from 57 to 75 years, and 54% of studied individuals were women. The main outcomes were the sensitivity and specificity to correctly identify individuals requiring treatment with and without genetic prescreening. The reference standard was a bone mineral density (BMD)-based Fracture Risk Assessment Tool (FRAX) score. The secondary outcomes were the proportions of the screened population requiring clinical-risk-factor-based FRAX (CRF-FRAX) screening and BMD-based FRAX (BMD-FRAX) screening. gSOS was strongly correlated with measured SOS (r2 = 23.2%, 95% CI 22.7% to 23.7%). Without genetic prescreening, guideline recommendations achieved a sensitivity and specificity for correct treatment assignment of 99.6% and 97.1%, respectively, in the validation cohorts. However, 81% of the population required CRF-FRAX tests, and 37% required BMD-FRAX tests to achieve this accuracy. Using gSOS in prescreening and limiting further assessment to those with a low gSOS resulted in small changes to the sensitivity and specificity (93.4% and 98.5%, respectively), but the proportions of individuals requiring CRF-FRAX tests and BMD-FRAX tests were reduced by 37% and 41%, respectively. Study limitations include a reliance on cohorts of predominantly European ethnicity and use of a proxy of fracture risk. CONCLUSIONS: Our results suggest that the use of a polygenic risk score in fracture risk screening could decrease the number of individuals requiring screening tests, including BMD measurement, while maintaining a high sensitivity and specificity to identify individuals who should be recommended an intervention.


Subject(s)
Mass Screening/methods , Multifactorial Inheritance , Osteoporotic Fractures/genetics , Osteoporotic Fractures/prevention & control , Risk Assessment/methods , Aged , Bone Density , Calcaneus/diagnostic imaging , Cohort Studies , Databases, Genetic , Female , Genetic Predisposition to Disease , Genome-Wide Association Study , Heel/diagnostic imaging , Humans , Machine Learning , Male , Middle Aged , Osteoporosis/genetics , Risk Factors , Ultrasonography , United Kingdom
5.
Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys ; 108(3): 802-812, 2020 11 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32413546

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: Detailed and accurate absorbed dose calculations from radiation interactions with the human body can be obtained with the Monte Carlo (MC) method. However, the MC method can be slow for use in the time-sensitive clinical workflow. The aim of this study was to provide a solution to the accuracy-time trade-off for 192Ir-based high-dose-rate brachytherapy by using deep learning. METHODS AND MATERIALS: RapidBrachyDL, a 3-dimensional deep convolutional neural network (CNN) model, is proposed to predict dose distributions calculated with the MC method given a patient's computed tomography images, contours of clinical target volume (CTV) and organs at risk, and treatment plan. Sixty-one patients with prostate cancer and 10 patients with cervical cancer were included in this study, with data from 47 patients with prostate cancer being used to train the model. RESULTS: Compared with ground truth MC simulations, the predicted dose distributions by RapidBrachyDL showed a consistent shape in the dose-volume histograms (DVHs); comparable DVH dosimetric indices including 0.73% difference for prostate CTV D90, 1.1% for rectum D2cc, 1.45% for urethra D0.1cc, and 1.05% for bladder D2cc; and substantially smaller prediction time, acceleration by a factor of 300. RapidBrachyDL also demonstrated good generalization to cervical data with 1.73%, 2.46%, 1.68%, and 1.74% difference for CTV D90, rectum D2cc, sigmoid D2cc, and bladder D2cc, respectively, which was unseen during the training. CONCLUSION: Deep CNN-based dose estimation is a promising method for patient-specific brachytherapy dosimetry. Desired radiation quantities can be obtained with accuracies arbitrarily close to those of the source MC algorithm, but with much faster computation times. The idea behind deep CNN-based dose estimation can be safely extended to other radiation sources and tumor sites by following a similar training process.


Subject(s)
Brachytherapy/methods , Deep Learning , Neural Networks, Computer , Organs at Risk/radiation effects , Prostatic Neoplasms/radiotherapy , Uterine Cervical Neoplasms/radiotherapy , Colon, Sigmoid/radiation effects , Female , Humans , Iridium Radioisotopes/therapeutic use , Male , Monte Carlo Method , Organs at Risk/diagnostic imaging , Prostate/radiation effects , Prostatic Neoplasms/diagnostic imaging , Radiotherapy Dosage , Radiotherapy Planning, Computer-Assisted/methods , Rectum/radiation effects , Retrospective Studies , Urinary Bladder/radiation effects , Uterine Cervical Neoplasms/diagnostic imaging
6.
Int J Soc Robot ; 10(1): 131-145, 2018 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32855745

ABSTRACT

While assistive robot technology is quickly progressing, several challenges remain to make this technology truly usable and useful for humans. One of the aspects that is particularly important is in defining control protocols that allow both the human and the robot technology to contribute to the best of their abilities. In this paper we propose a framework for the collaborative control of a smart wheelchair designed for individuals with mobility impairments. Our approach is based on a decision-theoretic model of control, and accepts commands from both the human user and robot controller. We use a Partially Observable Markov Decision Process to optimize the collaborative action choice, which allows the system to take into account uncertainty in the user intent, in the command and in the environment. The system is deployed and validated on the SmartWheeler platform, and experiments with 8 users show the improvement in usability and navigation efficiency that are achieved with this form of collaborative control.

8.
IEEE J Biomed Health Inform ; 21(4): 1163-1171, 2017 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27448377

ABSTRACT

The dual-hormone artificial pancreas is an emerging technology to treat type 1 diabetes (T1D). It consists of a glucose sensor, infusion pumps, and a dosing algorithm that directs hormonal delivery. Preclinical optimization of dosing algorithms using computer simulations has the potential to accelerate the pace of development for this technology. However, current simulation environments consider glucose regulation models that either do not include glucagon action submodels or include submodels that were proposed without comparison to other candidate models. We consider here nine candidate models of glucagon action featuring a number of possible characteristics: insulin-independent glucagon action, insulin/glucagon ratio effect on hepatic glucose production, insulin-dependent suppression of glucagon action, and the effect of rate of change of glucagon. To assess the models, we use measurements of plasma insulin, plasma glucagon, and endogenous glucose production collected from experiments involving eight subjects with T1D who receive four subcutaneous glucagon boluses. We estimate each model's parameters using a Bayesian approach, and the models are contrasted based on the deviance information criterion. The model achieving the best fit features insulin-dependent suppression of glucagon action and incorporates effects of both glucagon levels and its rate of change.


Subject(s)
Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1/metabolism , Glucagon/pharmacology , Models, Biological , Pancreas, Artificial , Algorithms , Bayes Theorem , Computer Simulation , Humans , Insulin/metabolism , Insulin Infusion Systems
9.
Disabil Rehabil Assist Technol ; 10(3): 191-7, 2015 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24712414

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: To explore power wheelchair users', caregivers' and clinicians' perspectives regarding the potential impact of intelligent power wheelchair use on social participation. METHODS: Semi-structured interviews were conducted with power wheelchair users (n = 12), caregivers (n = 4) and clinicians (n = 12). An illustrative video was used to facilitate discussion. The transcribed interviews were analyzed using thematic analysis. RESULTS: Three main themes were identified based on the experiences of the power wheelchair users, caregivers and clinicians: (1) increased social participation opportunities, (2) changing how social participation is experienced and (3) decreased risk of accidents during social participation. CONCLUSION: Findings from this study suggest that an intelligent power wheelchair would enhance social participation in a variety of important ways, thereby providing support for continued design and development of this assistive technology. IMPLICATIONS FOR REHABILITATION: An intelligent power wheelchair has the potential to: Increase social participation opportunities by overcoming challenges associated with navigating through crowds and small spaces. Change how social participation is experienced through "normalizing" social interactions and decreasing the effort required to drive a power wheelchair. Decrease the risk of accidents during social participation by reducing the need for dangerous compensatory strategies and minimizing the impact of the physical environment.


Subject(s)
Caregivers , Disabled Persons/psychology , Disabled Persons/rehabilitation , Social Participation , Wheelchairs , Activities of Daily Living , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Equipment Design , Humans , Interpersonal Relations , Middle Aged , Patient Satisfaction
10.
Stat Med ; 33(24): 4202-14, 2014 Oct 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24919867

ABSTRACT

Sequential multiple assignment randomized trials (SMARTs) are increasingly being used to inform clinical and intervention science. In a SMART, each patient is repeatedly randomized over time. Each randomization occurs at a critical decision point in the treatment course. These critical decision points often correspond to milestones in the disease process or other changes in a patient's health status. Thus, the timing and number of randomizations may vary across patients and depend on evolving patient-specific information. This presents unique challenges when analyzing data from a SMART in the presence of missing data. This paper presents the first comprehensive discussion of missing data issues typical of SMART studies: we describe five specific challenges and propose a flexible imputation strategy to facilitate valid statistical estimation and inference using incomplete data from a SMART. To illustrate these contributions, we consider data from the Clinical Antipsychotic Trial of Intervention and Effectiveness, one of the most well-known SMARTs to date.


Subject(s)
Data Interpretation, Statistical , Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic/methods , Antipsychotic Agents/therapeutic use , Decision Making , Humans , Longitudinal Studies , Regression Analysis , Schizophrenia/drug therapy
11.
Int J Environ Res Public Health ; 11(2): 2244-61, 2014 Feb 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24566051

ABSTRACT

Power wheelchairs (PWCs) can have a positive impact on user well-being, self-esteem, pain, activity and participation. Newly developed intelligent power wheelchairs (IPWs), allowing autonomous or collaboratively-controlled navigation, could enhance mobility of individuals not able to use, or having difficulty using, standard PWCs. The objective of this study was to explore the perspectives of PWC users (PWUs) and their caregivers regarding if and how IPWs could impact on current challenges faced by PWUs, as well as inform current development of IPWs. A qualitative exploratory study using individual interviews was conducted with PWUs (n = 12) and caregivers (n = 4). A semi-structured interview guide and video were used to facilitate informed discussion regarding IPWs. Thematic analysis revealed three main themes: (1) "challenging situations that may be overcome by an IPW" described how the IPW features of obstacle avoidance, path following, and target following could alleviate PWUs' identified mobility difficulties; (2) "cautious optimism concerning IPW use revealed participants" addresses concerns regarding using an IPW as well as technological suggestions; (3) "defining the potential IPW user" revealed characteristics of PWUs that would benefit from IPW use. Findings indicate how IPW use may help overcome PWC difficulties and confirm the importance of user input in the ongoing development of IPWs.


Subject(s)
Caregivers/psychology , Disabled Persons/psychology , Wheelchairs/trends , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Female , Humans , Interviews as Topic , Male , Middle Aged , Young Adult
12.
IEEE J Transl Eng Health Med ; 2: 2100509, 2014.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27170879

ABSTRACT

Using a powered wheelchair (PW) is a complex task requiring advanced perceptual and motor control skills. Unfortunately, PW incidents and accidents are not uncommon and their consequences can be serious. The objective of this paper is to develop technological tools that can be used to characterize a wheelchair user's driving behavior under various settings. In the experiments conducted, PWs are outfitted with a datalogging platform that records, in real-time, the 3-D acceleration of the PW. Data collection was conducted over 35 different activities, designed to capture a spectrum of PW driving events performed at different speeds (collisions with fixed or moving objects, rolling on incline plane, and rolling across multiple types obstacles). The data was processed using time-series analysis and data mining techniques, to automatically detect and identify the different events. We compared the classification accuracy using four different types of time-series features: 1) time-delay embeddings; 2) time-domain characterization; 3) frequency-domain features; and 4) wavelet transforms. In the analysis, we compared the classification accuracy obtained when distinguishing between safe and unsafe events during each of the 35 different activities. For the purposes of this study, unsafe events were defined as activities containing collisions against objects at different speed, and the remainder were defined as safe events. We were able to accurately detect 98% of unsafe events, with a low (12%) false positive rate, using only five examples of each activity. This proof-of-concept study shows that the proposed approach has the potential of capturing, based on limited input from embedded sensors, contextual information on PW use, and of automatically characterizing a user's PW driving behavior.

13.
J Neuroeng Rehabil ; 10(1): 58, 2013 Jun 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23773851

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Many people with mobility impairments, who require the use of powered wheelchairs, have difficulty completing basic maneuvering tasks during their activities of daily living (ADL). In order to provide assistance to this population, robotic and intelligent system technologies have been used to design an intelligent powered wheelchair (IPW). This paper provides a comprehensive overview of the design and validation of the IPW. METHODS: The main contributions of this work are three-fold. First, we present a software architecture for robot navigation and control in constrained spaces. Second, we describe a decision-theoretic approach for achieving robust speech-based control of the intelligent wheelchair. Third, we present an evaluation protocol motivated by a meaningful clinical outcome, in the form of the Robotic Wheelchair Skills Test (RWST). This allows us to perform a thorough characterization of the performance and safety of the system, involving 17 test subjects (8 non-PW users, 9 regular PW users), 32 complete RWST sessions, 25 total hours of testing, and 9 kilometers of total running distance. RESULTS: User tests with the RWST show that the navigation architecture reduced collisions by more than 60% compared to other recent intelligent wheelchair platforms. On the tasks of the RWST, we measured an average decrease of 4% in performance score and 3% in safety score (not statistically significant), compared to the scores obtained with conventional driving model. This analysis was performed with regular users that had over 6 years of wheelchair driving experience, compared to approximately one half-hour of training with the autonomous mode. CONCLUSIONS: The platform tested in these experiments is among the most experimentally validated robotic wheelchairs in realistic contexts. The results establish that proficient powered wheelchair users can achieve the same level of performance with the intelligent command mode, as with the conventional command mode.


Subject(s)
Artificial Intelligence , Robotics/instrumentation , Software , Wheelchairs , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Disabled Persons/rehabilitation , Equipment Design , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Treatment Outcome , User-Computer Interface
14.
Exp Neurol ; 241: 179-83, 2013 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23313899

ABSTRACT

Deep brain stimulation (DBS) is a promising tool for treating drug-resistant epileptic patients. Currently, the most common approach is fixed-frequency stimulation (periodic pacing) by means of stimulating devices that operate under open-loop control. However, a drawback of this DBS strategy is the impossibility of tailoring a personalized treatment, which also limits the optimization of the stimulating apparatus. Here, we propose a novel DBS methodology based on a closed-loop control strategy, developed by exploiting statistical machine learning techniques, in which stimulation parameters are adapted to the current neural activity thus allowing for seizure suppression that is fine-tuned on the individual scale (adaptive stimulation). By means of field potential recording from adult rat hippocampus-entorhinal cortex (EC) slices treated with the convulsant drug 4-aminopyridine we determined the effectiveness of this approach compared to low-frequency periodic pacing, and found that the closed-loop stimulation strategy: (i) has similar efficacy as low-frequency periodic pacing in suppressing ictal-like events but (ii) is more efficient than periodic pacing in that it requires less electrical pulses. We also provide evidence that the closed-loop stimulation strategy can alternatively be employed to tune the frequency of a periodic pacing strategy. Our findings indicate that the adaptive stimulation strategy may represent a novel, promising approach to DBS for individually-tailored epilepsy treatment.


Subject(s)
Adaptation, Physiological/physiology , Evoked Potentials/physiology , Limbic System/physiology , Animals , Biophysics , Electric Stimulation/adverse effects , In Vitro Techniques , Neural Pathways/physiology , Rats , Rats, Sprague-Dawley
15.
IEEE Trans Pattern Anal Mach Intell ; 35(3): 740-54, 2013 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22641699

ABSTRACT

We present a novel framework for analyzing univariate time series data. At the heart of the approach is a versatile algorithm for measuring the similarity of two segments of time series called geometric template matching (GeTeM). First, we use GeTeM to compute a similarity measure for clustering and nearest-neighbor classification. Next, we present a semi-supervised learning algorithm that uses the similarity measure with hierarchical clustering in order to improve classification performance when unlabeled training data are available. Finally, we present a boosting framework called TDEBOOST, which uses an ensemble of GeTeM classifiers. TDEBOOST augments the traditional boosting approach with an additional step in which the features used as inputs to the classifier are adapted at each step to improve the training error. We empirically evaluate the proposed approaches on several datasets, such as accelerometer data collected from wearable sensors and ECG data.

16.
J Neurosci Methods ; 204(2): 318-25, 2012 Mar 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22172917

ABSTRACT

Deep brain stimulation (DBS) is a promising therapeutic approach for epilepsy treatment. Recently, research has focused on the implementation of stimulation protocols that would adapt to the patients need (adaptive stimulation) and deliver electrical stimuli only when it is most useful. A formal mathematical description of the effects of electrical stimulation on neuronal networks is a prerequisite for the development of adaptive DBS algorithms. Using tools from non-linear dynamic analysis, we describe an evidence-based, mathematical modeling approach that (1) accurately simulates epileptiform activity at time-scales of single and multiple ictal discharges, (2) simulates modulation of neural dynamics during epileptiform activity in response to fixed, low-frequency electrical stimulation, (3) defines a mapping from real-world observations to model state, and (4) defines a mapping from model state to real-world observations. We validate the real-world utility of the model's properties by statistical comparison between the number, duration, and interval of ictal-like discharges observed in vitro and those simulated in silica under conditions of repeated stimuli at fixed-frequency. These validation results confirm that the evidence-based modeling approach captures robust, informative features of neural network dynamics of in vitro epileptiform activity under periodic pacing and support its use for further implementation of adaptive DBS protocols for epilepsy treatment.


Subject(s)
Deep Brain Stimulation/methods , Epilepsy/therapy , Neural Networks, Computer , Neurons/physiology , Nonlinear Dynamics , Algorithms , Animals , Computer Simulation , Disease Models, Animal , Epilepsy/pathology , Epilepsy/physiopathology , Male , Rats , Reproducibility of Results
17.
Mach Learn ; 84(1-2): 109-136, 2011 Jul 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21799585

ABSTRACT

This paper highlights the role that reinforcement learning can play in the optimization of treatment policies for chronic illnesses. Before applying any off-the-shelf reinforcement learning methods in this setting, we must first tackle a number of challenges. We outline some of these challenges and present methods for overcoming them. First, we describe a multiple imputation approach to overcome the problem of missing data. Second, we discuss the use of function approximation in the context of a highly variable observation set. Finally, we discuss approaches to summarizing the evidence in the data for recommending a particular action and quantifying the uncertainty around the Q-function of the recommended policy. We present the results of applying these methods to real clinical trial data of patients with schizophrenia.

18.
Neural Netw ; 24(6): 526-37, 2011 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21444193

ABSTRACT

We describe a computational model of epileptiform activity mimicking the activity exhibited by an animal model of epilepsy in vitro. The computational model permits generation of synthetic data to assist in the evaluation of new algorithms for epilepsy treatment via adaptive neurostimulation. The model implements both single-compartment pyramidal neurons and fast-spiking interneurons, arranged in a one-dimensional network using both excitatory and inhibitory synapses. The model tracks changes in extracellular ion concentrations, which determine the reversal potentials of membrane currents. Changes in simulated ion concentration provide positive feedback which drives the system towards the epileptiform state. One mechanism of positive feedback explored by this model is the conversion of pyramidal cells from regular spiking to intrinsic bursting as extracellular potassium concentration increases. One of the main contributions of this work is the development of a slow depression mechanism that enforces seizure termination. The network spontaneously leaves the seizure-like state as the slow depression variable decreases. This is one of the first detailed computational models of epileptiform activity, which exhibits realistic transitions between inter-seizure and seizure states, and back, with state durations similar to the in vitro model. We validate the computational model by comparing its state durations to those of the biological model. We also show that electrical stimulation of the computational model achieves seizure suppression comparable to that observed in the in vitro model.


Subject(s)
Computer Simulation , Disease Models, Animal , Entorhinal Cortex/physiopathology , Epilepsy/pathology , Hippocampus/physiopathology , 4-Aminopyridine/pharmacology , Action Potentials/physiology , Animals , Entorhinal Cortex/pathology , Hippocampus/pathology , In Vitro Techniques , Inhibition, Psychological , Male , Models, Neurological , Neurons/drug effects , Neurons/metabolism , Neurons/physiology , Potassium/metabolism , Potassium Channel Blockers/pharmacology , Rats , Synapses/physiology
19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22256033

ABSTRACT

This paper presents a method to automatically recognize events and driving activities during the use of a powered wheelchair (PW). The method uses a support vector machine classifier, trained from sensor-based data from a datalogging platform installed on the PW. Data from a 3D accelerometer positioned on the back of the PW were collected in a laboratory space during PW driving tasks. 16-segmented events and driving activities (i.e. impacts from different side on different objects, rolling down or up on incline surface, going across threshold of different height) were performed repeatedly (n=25 trials) by one operator at three different speeds (slow, normal, high). We present results from an experiment aiming to classify five different events and driving activities from the sensor data acquired using the datalogging platform. Classification results show the ability of the proposed method to reliably segment 100% of events, and to identify the correct event type in 80% of events.


Subject(s)
Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted , Wheelchairs , Activities of Daily Living , Aged , Aging , Algorithms , Computers , Equipment Design , Humans , Man-Machine Systems , Reproducibility of Results , Research Design , Robotics , Support Vector Machine , Time Factors , User-Computer Interface
20.
Int J Neural Syst ; 19(4): 227-40, 2009 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19731397

ABSTRACT

This paper presents a new methodology for automatically learning an optimal neurostimulation strategy for the treatment of epilepsy. The technical challenge is to automatically modulate neurostimulation parameters, as a function of the observed EEG signal, so as to minimize the frequency and duration of seizures. The methodology leverages recent techniques from the machine learning literature, in particular the reinforcement learning paradigm, to formalize this optimization problem. We present an algorithm which is able to automatically learn an adaptive neurostimulation strategy directly from labeled training data acquired from animal brain tissues. Our results suggest that this methodology can be used to automatically find a stimulation strategy which effectively reduces the incidence of seizures, while also minimizing the amount of stimulation applied. This work highlights the crucial role that modern machine learning techniques can play in the optimization of treatment strategies for patients with chronic disorders such as epilepsy.


Subject(s)
Electric Stimulation Therapy/methods , Epilepsy/therapy , Learning/physiology , Reinforcement, Psychology , 4-Aminopyridine/pharmacology , Algorithms , Animals , Biophysics , Disease Models, Animal , Electroencephalography/methods , Entorhinal Cortex/physiopathology , Epilepsy/chemically induced , Epilepsy/pathology , In Vitro Techniques , Male , Man-Machine Systems , Potassium Channel Blockers/pharmacology , Rats , Rats, Sprague-Dawley
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