Florian Lipsmeier

h-index18
2papers

2 Papers

LGMar 16, 2021Code
Interpretable Deep Learning for the Remote Characterisation of Ambulation in Multiple Sclerosis using Smartphones

Andrew P. Creagh, Florian Lipsmeier, Michael Lindemann et al.

The emergence of digital technologies such as smartphones in healthcare applications have demonstrated the possibility of developing rich, continuous, and objective measures of multiple sclerosis (MS) disability that can be administered remotely and out-of-clinic. In this work, deep convolutional neural networks (DCNN) applied to smartphone inertial sensor data were shown to better distinguish healthy from MS participant ambulation, compared to standard Support Vector Machine (SVM) feature-based methodologies. To overcome the typical limitations associated with remotely generated health data, such as low subject numbers, sparsity, and heterogeneous data, a transfer learning (TL) model from similar large open-source datasets was proposed. Our TL framework utilised the ambulatory information learned on Human Activity Recognition (HAR) tasks collected from similar smartphone-based sensor data. A lack of transparency of "black-box" deep networks remains one of the largest stumbling blocks to the wider acceptance of deep learning for clinical applications. Ensuing work therefore aimed to visualise DCNN decisions attributed by relevance heatmaps using Layer-Wise Relevance Propagation (LRP). Through the LRP framework, the patterns captured from smartphone-based inertial sensor data that were reflective of those who are healthy versus persons with MS (PwMS) could begin to be established and understood. Interpretations suggested that cadence-based measures, gait speed, and ambulation-related signal perturbations were distinct characteristics that distinguished MS disability from healthy participants. Robust and interpretable outcomes, generated from high-frequency out-of-clinic assessments, could greatly augment the current in-clinic assessment picture for PwMS, to inform better disease management techniques, and enable the development of better therapeutic interventions.

LGAug 7, 2025
Human Activity Recognition from Smartphone Sensor Data for Clinical Trials

Stefania Russo, Rafał Klimas, Marta Płonka et al.

We developed a ResNet-based human activity recognition (HAR) model with minimal overhead to detect gait versus non-gait activities and everyday activities (walking, running, stairs, standing, sitting, lying, sit-to-stand transitions). The model was trained and evaluated using smartphone sensor data from adult healthy controls (HC) and people with multiple sclerosis (PwMS) with Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS) scores between 0.0-6.5. Datasets included the GaitLab study (ISRCTN15993728), an internal Roche dataset, and publicly available data sources (training only). Data from 34 HC and 68 PwMS (mean [SD] EDSS: 4.7 [1.5]) were included in the evaluation. The HAR model showed 98.4% and 99.6% accuracy in detecting gait versus non-gait activities in the GaitLab and Roche datasets, respectively, similar to a comparative state-of-the-art ResNet model (99.3% and 99.4%). For everyday activities, the proposed model not only demonstrated higher accuracy than the state-of-the-art model (96.2% vs 91.9%; internal Roche dataset) but also maintained high performance across 9 smartphone wear locations (handbag, shopping bag, crossbody bag, backpack, hoodie pocket, coat/jacket pocket, hand, neck, belt), outperforming the state-of-the-art model by 2.8% - 9.0%. In conclusion, the proposed HAR model accurately detects everyday activities and shows high robustness to various smartphone wear locations, demonstrating its practical applicability.