Individuals with spinal cord injury (SCI) report upper limb function as their top recovery priority. To accurately represent the true impact of new interventions on patient function, evaluation should occur in a natural setting. Wearable cameras can be used to monitor hand function at home, using computer vision to automatically analyze the resulting egocentric videos. A key step in this process, hand detection, is difficult to accomplish robustly and reliably, hindering the deployment of a complete monitoring system in the home and community. We propose an accurate and efficient hand detection method that uses a simple combination of existing detection and tracking algorithms, evaluated on a new hand detection dataset, consisting of 167,622 frames of egocentric videos collected from 17 individuals with SCI in a home simulation laboratory. The F1-scores for the best detector and tracker alone (SSD and Median Flow) were 0.90±0.07 and 0.42±0.18, respectively. The best combination method, in which a detector was used to initialize and reset a tracker, resulted in an F1-score of 0.87±0.07 while being two times faster than the fastest detector. The method proposed here, in combination with wearable cameras, will help clinicians directly measure hand function in a patient's daily life at home.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/TNSRE.2020.2968912DOI Listing

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