Open Access
Open access
volume 9 pages e56980

Classifying Residual Stroke Severity Using Robotics-Assisted Stroke Rehabilitation: Machine Learning Approach

Russell Jeter 1, 2, 3
Raymond Greenfield 1, 4
Stephen N. Housley 2, 3, 5, 6
Igor Belykh 1, 4, 7, 8
Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2024-10-07
SJR
CiteScore0.5
Impact factor
ISSN25613278
PubMed ID:  39374054
Abstract
Background

Stroke therapy is essential to reduce impairments and improve motor movements by engaging autogenous neuroplasticity. Traditionally, stroke rehabilitation occurs in inpatient and outpatient rehabilitation facilities. However, recent literature increasingly explores moving the recovery process into the home and integrating technology-based interventions. This study advances this goal by promoting in-home, autonomous recovery for patients who experienced a stroke through robotics-assisted rehabilitation and classifying stroke residual severity using machine learning methods.

Objective

Our main objective is to use kinematics data collected during in-home, self-guided therapy sessions to develop supervised machine learning methods, to address a clinician’s autonomous classification of stroke residual severity–labeled data toward improving in-home, robotics-assisted stroke rehabilitation.

Methods

In total, 33 patients who experienced a stroke participated in in-home therapy sessions using Motus Nova robotics rehabilitation technology to capture upper and lower body motion. During each therapy session, the Motus Hand and Motus Foot devices collected movement data, assistance data, and activity-specific data. We then synthesized, processed, and summarized these data. Next, the therapy session data were paired with clinician-informed, discrete stroke residual severity labels: “no range of motion (ROM),” “low ROM,” and “high ROM.” Afterward, an 80%:20% split was performed to divide the dataset into a training set and a holdout test set. We used 4 machine learning algorithms to classify stroke residual severity: light gradient boosting (LGB), extra trees classifier, deep feed-forward neural network, and classical logistic regression. We selected models based on 10-fold cross-validation and measured their performance on a holdout test dataset using F1-score to identify which model maximizes stroke residual severity classification accuracy.

Results

We demonstrated that the LGB method provides the most reliable autonomous detection of stroke severity. The trained model is a consensus model that consists of 139 decision trees with up to 115 leaves each. This LGB model boasts a 96.70% F1-score compared to logistic regression (55.82%), extra trees classifier (94.81%), and deep feed-forward neural network (70.11%).

Conclusions

We showed how objectively measured rehabilitation training paired with machine learning methods can be used to identify the residual stroke severity class, with efforts to enhance in-home self-guided, individualized stroke rehabilitation. The model we trained relies only on session summary statistics, meaning it can potentially be integrated into similar settings for real-time classification, such as outpatient rehabilitation facilities.

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Jeter R. et al. Classifying Residual Stroke Severity Using Robotics-Assisted Stroke Rehabilitation: Machine Learning Approach // JMIR Biomedical Engineering. 2024. Vol. 9. p. e56980.
GOST all authors (up to 50) Copy
Jeter R., Greenfield R., Housley S. N., Belykh I. Classifying Residual Stroke Severity Using Robotics-Assisted Stroke Rehabilitation: Machine Learning Approach // JMIR Biomedical Engineering. 2024. Vol. 9. p. e56980.
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RIS Copy
TY - JOUR
DO - 10.2196/56980
UR - https://biomedeng.jmir.org/2024/1/e56980
TI - Classifying Residual Stroke Severity Using Robotics-Assisted Stroke Rehabilitation: Machine Learning Approach
T2 - JMIR Biomedical Engineering
AU - Jeter, Russell
AU - Greenfield, Raymond
AU - Housley, Stephen N.
AU - Belykh, Igor
PY - 2024
DA - 2024/10/07
PB - JMIR Publications
SP - e56980
VL - 9
PMID - 39374054
SN - 2561-3278
ER -
BibTex
Cite this
BibTex (up to 50 authors) Copy
@article{2024_Jeter,
author = {Russell Jeter and Raymond Greenfield and Stephen N. Housley and Igor Belykh},
title = {Classifying Residual Stroke Severity Using Robotics-Assisted Stroke Rehabilitation: Machine Learning Approach},
journal = {JMIR Biomedical Engineering},
year = {2024},
volume = {9},
publisher = {JMIR Publications},
month = {oct},
url = {https://biomedeng.jmir.org/2024/1/e56980},
pages = {e56980},
doi = {10.2196/56980}
}