Dynamically enhanced static handwriting representation for Parkinson's disease detection
This work addresses the problem of non-invasive diagnosis support for clinicians in neurodegenerative disorders, specifically Parkinson's disease, but is incremental as it builds on existing handwriting analysis methods.
The paper tackled Parkinson's disease detection by proposing a dynamically enhanced static handwriting representation that embeds temporal information, achieving improved classification results compared to using static or dynamic handwriting alone on the PaHaW dataset.
Computer aided diagnosis systems can provide non-invasive, low-cost tools to support clinicians. These systems have the potential to assist the diagnosis and monitoring of neurodegenerative disorders, in particular Parkinson's disease (PD). Handwriting plays a special role in the context of PD assessment. In this paper, the discriminating power of "dynamically enhanced" static images of handwriting is investigated. The enhanced images are synthetically generated by exploiting simultaneously the static and dynamic properties of handwriting. Specifically, we propose a static representation that embeds dynamic information based on: (i) drawing the points of the samples, instead of linking them, so as to retain temporal/velocity information; and (ii) adding pen-ups for the same purpose. To evaluate the effectiveness of the new handwriting representation, a fair comparison between this approach and state-of-the-art methods based on static and dynamic handwriting is conducted on the same dataset, i.e. PaHaW. The classification workflow employs transfer learning to extract meaningful features from multiple representations of the input data. An ensemble of different classifiers is used to achieve the final predictions. Dynamically enhanced static handwriting is able to outperform the results obtained by using static and dynamic handwriting separately.