Mobilize Center: Models for Mobile Sensing and Precision Rehabilitation
Project Number5P41EB027060-03
Contact PI/Project LeaderDELP, SCOTT L
Awardee OrganizationSTANFORD UNIVERSITY
Description
Abstract Text
Limited mobility due to conditions like osteoarthritis (OA), cerebral palsy, and Parkinson’s disease affects
millions of individuals, at enormous personal and societal cost. Rehabilitation can dramatically improve mobility
and function, but current rehabilitation practice requires in-person guidance by a skilled clinician, increasing
expense and limiting access. Mobile sensing technologies are now ubiquitous and have the potential to
measure patient function and guide treatment outside the clinic, but they currently fail to capture the
characteristics of motion required to accurately monitor function and customize treatment. Millions of low-cost
mobile sensors are generating terabytes of data that could be analyzed in combination with other data, such as
images, clinical records, and video, to enable studies of unprecedented scale, but machine learning models for
analyzing these large-scale, heterogeneous, time-varying data are lacking.
To address these challenges, we will establish a Biomedical Technology Resource Center —The Mobilize
Center. Through the leadership of an experienced scientific team, we will create and disseminate innovative
tools to quantify movement biomechanics with mobile sensors.
Specifically, we will:
1. Push the bounds of what we can measure via wearable sensors using models that compute muscle
and joint forces and metabolic cost of locomotion. These models, based on biomechanical and machine
learning models, will be disseminated via our newly created OpenSense software, which will be used
by thousands of researchers to gain new insights into patient biomechanics using mobile sensors.
2. Meet the need for tools that analyze data about movement dynamics and develop machine learning
models to analyze and generate insights from unstructured, high-dimensional data, including time-
series (e.g., from mobile sensors), images (e.g., MRI), and video (e.g., smartphone video of a patient’s
gait).
3. Provide tools needed to intervene in the real-world. We will develop algorithms to accurately quantify
kinematics outside the lab for long durations using data from inertial measurement units (IMUs). We will
also build behavioral models to adapt and personalize goal setting, drawing on movement records from
6 million individuals, as well as health goals and exercise for 1.7 million people.
Through intensive interactions with our Collaborative Projects, we will focus on improving rehabilitation
outcomes for individuals with limited mobility due to osteoarthritis, obesity, Parkinson’s disease, and cerebral
palsy. The Center’s tools and services will enable researchers to revolutionize how we diagnose, monitor, and
treat mobility disorders, providing tools needed to deliver precision rehabilitation at low cost and on a massive
scale in the future.
Public Health Relevance Statement
Limited mobility due to conditions like osteoarthritis, cerebral palsy, and Parkinson’s affects
millions of individuals, at a great cost to public health and personal well-being. Rehabilitation
can dramatically improve mobility and function, but current rehabilitation practice requires in-
person guidance by a skilled clinician, increasing expense and limiting access. This project will
revolutionize how we diagnose, monitor, and treat mobility limitations and enable personalized
rehabilitation at low cost and on a massive scale using wearable sensing technology in the
future.
National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering
CFDA Code
286
DUNS Number
009214214
UEI
HJD6G4D6TJY5
Project Start Date
04-May-2020
Project End Date
30-November-2025
Budget Start Date
01-December-2022
Budget End Date
30-November-2023
Project Funding Information for 2023
Total Funding
$1,204,632
Direct Costs
$775,000
Indirect Costs
$429,632
Year
Funding IC
FY Total Cost by IC
2023
National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering
$602,316
2023
Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development
$602,316
Year
Funding IC
FY Total Cost by IC
Sub Projects
No Sub Projects information available for 5P41EB027060-03
Publications
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No Publications available for 5P41EB027060-03
Patents
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Outcomes
The Project Outcomes shown here are displayed verbatim as submitted by the Principal Investigator (PI) for this award. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed are those of the PI and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Institutes of Health. NIH has not endorsed the content below.
No Outcomes available for 5P41EB027060-03
Clinical Studies
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News and More
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History
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Similar Projects
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