D. Campolo, F. Taffoni, D. Formica, G. Schiavone, F. Keller, and E. Guglielmelli (2011)
Inertial-Magnetic Sensors for Assessing Spatial Cognition in Infants
Biomedical Engineering, IEEE Transactions on, 58(5):1499 -1503.
This paper describes a novel approach to the
assessment of spatial cognition in children. In particular we
present a wireless instrumented toy embedding magneto-inertial
sensors for orientation tracking, specifically developed to assess
the ability to insert objects into holes. To be used in naturalistic
environments (e.g. daycares), we also describe an in-field calibration
procedure based on a sequence of manual rotations, not
relying on accurate motions or sophisticated equipment.
The final accuracy of the proposed system, after the mentioned
calibration procedure, is derived by direct comparison with
a gold-standard motion tracking device. In particular, both
systems are subjected to a sequence of ten single-axis rotations
(approximately 90 deg, back and forth), about three different
axes. The root-mean-square of the angular error between the
two measurements (gold-standard vs. proposed systems) was
evaluated for each trial. In particular, the average rms error
is under 2 deg.
This study indicates that a technological approach to ecological
assessment of spatial cognition in infants is indeed feasible. As
a consequence, prevention through screening of large number of
infants is at reach.
angular error;calibration;children;inertial-magnetic sensors;infants;orientation tracking;rms error;spatial cognition;biomedical equipment;biomedical measurement;brain;calibration;cognition;magnetic sensors;measurement errors;neurophysiology;paediatrics;


