| Literature DB >> 35590866 |
Md-Billal Hossain1, Youngsun Kong1, Hugo F Posada-Quintero1, Ki H Chon1.
Abstract
The most traditional sites for electrodermal activity (EDA) data collection, palmar locations such as fingers or palms, are not usually recommended for ambulatory monitoring given that subjects have to use their hands regularly during their daily activities, and therefore, alternative sites are often sought for EDA data collection. In this study, we collected EDA signals (n = 23 subjects, 19 male) from four measurement sites (forehead, back of neck, finger, and inner edge of foot) during cognitive stress and induction of mild motion artifacts by walking and one-handed weightlifting. Furthermore, we computed several EDA indices from the EDA signals obtained from different sites and evaluated their efficiency to classify cognitive stress from the baseline state. We found a high within-subject correlation between the EDA signals obtained from the finger and the feet. Consistently high correlation was also found between the finger and the foot EDA in both the phasic and tonic components. Statistically significant differences were obtained between the baseline and cognitive stress stage only for the EDA indices computed from the finger and the foot EDA. Moreover, the receiver operating characteristic curve for cognitive stress detection showed a higher area-under-the-curve for the EDA indices computed from the finger and foot EDA. We also evaluated the robustness of the different body sites against motion artifacts and found that the foot EDA location was the best alternative to other sites.Entities:
Keywords: SCR; cognitive stress; electrodermal activity; statistical test
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35590866 PMCID: PMC9104297 DOI: 10.3390/s22093177
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.847
Figure 1Different locations of electrode placement.
Experimental protocol.
| Duration (s) | Activity Description |
|---|---|
| 120 | Relax, supine, with eyes closed |
| 120 | Perform Stroop test |
| 120 | Walk at 3 mph |
| 120 | Dumbbell deadlift, one handed; release between each repetition |
Figure 2EDA signals collected from different body sites (left side), Corresponding phasic signals (right side).
Mean and standard deviation of the correlation coefficients between EDA signals from the finger and other body sites.
| Location | Raw Data | Phasic | Tonic | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean Pearson r | SD | Mean Pearson r | SD | Mean Pearson r | SD | |
| Forehead | 0.3194 | 0.4510 | 0.2833 | 0.2650 | 0.3077 | 0.4643 |
| Neck | 0.4405 | 0.4601 | 0.2530 | 0.1920 | 0.4532 | 0.4200 |
| Feet | 0.8466 | 0.1851 | 0.7895 | 0.1118 | 0.8261 | 0.1704 |
Statistical t-test between the resting and SCWT stages.
| Measurement Site | EDA Index | Resting Mean | SCWT Mean | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Forehead | No. of SCR | 12.3478 | 12.3478 | 0.4896 |
| Phasic mean | 0.2839 | 0.4378 | 0.7634 | |
| Phasic variance | 0.3040 | 0.3497 | 0.9761 | |
| Tonic mean | 25.7738 | 25.6239 | 0.8692 | |
| Tonic variance | 0.9782 | 1.6313 | 0.1559 | |
| Neck | No. of SCR | 5.2609 | 4.5652 | 0.5065 |
| Phasic mean | 0.0373 | 0.0786 | 0.3799 | |
| Phasic variance | 0.0512 | 0.1030 | 0.3182 | |
| Tonic mean | 4.1619 | 3.6539 | 0.1851 | |
| Tonic variance | 0.5426 | 0.4944 | 0.8788 | |
| Finger | No. of SCR | 6.0869 | 11.8696 | 0.0017 ** |
| Phasic mean | 0.1353 | 0.2762 | 0.0016 ** | |
| Phasic variance | 0.1362 | 0.2047 | 0.0248 * | |
| Tonic mean | 6.5960 | 6.6051 | 0.9802 | |
| Tonic variance | 1.0982 | 0.8353 | 0.1306 | |
| Foot | No. of SCR | 8.3478 | 15.0870 | 0.0006 *** |
| Phasic mean | 0.1435 | 0.3562 | 0.0154 * | |
| Phasic variance | 0.0434 | 0.1065 | 0.0091 ** | |
| Tonic mean | 5.5115 | 6.3622 | 0.0192 * | |
| Tonic variance | 0.5430 | 0.6312 | 0.4273 |
* p < 0.05, ** p < 0.01, *** p < 0.001.
Figure 3ROC curves for mean of the phasic signal (left) and number of SCR (right).
Figure 4Relative power in the noise band during walking (left) and weightlifting (right).
Figure 5Raw and filtered EDAs (finger and foot) during walking and weightlifting.
Figure 6Effect of hydration time on forehead EDA.