2.3 Statistical Analysis
Statistical analyses were performed to examine the re-
liability of the StW parameters. The Intra-Class Cor-
relation (ICC) between two measurements was used.
Absolute agreement was reported. According to Mc-
Graw et al. (McGraw and Wong, 1996) reliability
greater than 0.90 is considered as excellent, reliability
greater than 0.75 is considered as good, greater than
0.50 is moderate, and lower than 0.50 is poor.
Next, the hypotheses on whether the StW parame-
ters of both sit-to-walk phases are able to distinguish
a healthy subject from a PD patient was tested. The
Shapiro-Wilk test was used to verify the normality of
parameters in each observed dataset. The assumption
of a normal data distribution in the observed datasets
had been rejected (significance level p=0.05). There-
fore, the nonparametric Wilcoxon rank sum test was
used to compare statistical significance differences
in the sit-to-walk transition between PD patients and
control group data. The significance level was set to
p<0.05. All preprocessing and analyses were carried
out offline using the MatLab (MatLab R2015, Math-
works, Inc., Natick, MA, USA) programming envi-
ronment.
3 RESULTS
From Table 1, it can be seen that out of the four pa-
rameters, three parameters in the control group and
one parameter in PD patients demonstrated poor re-
liability (ICC<0.50) in all three cases (entire StW,
sit-bend, bend-stand). For the control group these
were: duration, mean and variance. For PD pa-
tients this was only for duration. The peak value in
the control group showed a higher reliability (moder-
ate, ICC>0.50) in the bend-stand phase then in other
cases (poor, ICC<0.50). The mean and variance in
PD had poor reliability in the sit-bend phase and mod-
erate (ICC>0.50) in the entire StW and bend-stand.
When comparing PD patients and the control
group, the peak value, and variance were signifi-
cantly different in the entire StW, sit-bend and bend-
stand phases. The mean value showed the difference
between the groups in the sit-bend and bend-stand
phases (Figure 2). The duration did not show a differ-
ence in any of the tested cases. A significant differ-
ence in the entire StW but not sit-bend or bend-stand
phases was not observed for any of utilized parame-
ters.
4 DISCUSSION
In this work, we compared the results of the entire sit-
to-walk transition to a more detailed approach with
transition phases. We evaluated StW transition. Addi-
tionally, we divided the sit-to-walk transition into two
phases, namely sit-bend and bend-stand, and evalu-
ated them separately.
First, we analysed whether the StW measures cal-
culated per phase have similar reliability as measures
calculated for entire StW. The analyses were provided
per subject group. Based of poor reliability results
(Table 1) it can be inferred that the parameter dura-
tion of the entire StW and its phases is not suitable for
StW assessment (the entirety or its parts). The results
showed a higher reliability in PD patients than the CG
for almost for all parameters and tested cases. This
can be elucidated by the reduced concentration of the
CG to perform a StW. In the PD group, some param-
eters (mean, variance) exhibited a lower reliability in
the sit-bend phase than in other phases. In contrast
to the peak parameter, mean and variance are affected
by the accuracy of StW detection. Especially the de-
tection of the StW beginning is a challenging task be-
cause the sit-bend phase may be preceded by gently
bending forward and backward. Thus, a comparison
of detection methods with respect to their impact to
StW parameters is needed to make results more com-
parable across studies.
In addition, the training effect might play impor-
tant role in reliability assessment of two consecutive
trials. To our knowledge, the training effect of TUG
subcomponents has not yet been studied.
Second, we tested whether StW phases can dif-
ferentiate between PD patients and older adults bet-
ter than entire StW. The present study is consistent
with previous works. No differences between PD a
CG were observed for duration and mean parameters
computed for entire StW (Salarian et al., 2010; Weiss
et al., 2013). Unlike duration, the mean parameter re-
vealed a difference between these groups in both indi-
vidual phases (sit-bend, bend-stand). Finally, we sug-
gest that splitting StW into phases can benefit a TUG
StW analysis.
Nevertheless, there are some limitations to this re-
search study. The most important is that the sam-
ple size of the subjects was not high. However, 71
subjects proved to be sufficient for preliminary re-
search which managed to test the basic attributes of
the method proposed for further studies of TUG.
Can Sit-to-walk Assessment Maximize Instrumented Timed Up Go Test Output?
211