Database Open Access
Noise Enhancement of Sensorimotor Function
Published: Oct. 29, 2004. Version: 1.0.0
Noise Enhancement of Sensorimotor Function (Oct. 29, 2004, midnight)
Measurements of postural sway in healthy elderly and young volunteers, with and without subsensory stimulation of the soles of the feet to improve balance control, are available in a new database, Noise Enhancement of Sensorimotor Function.
Please include the standard citation for PhysioNet:
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Goldberger, A., Amaral, L., Glass, L., Hausdorff, J., Ivanov, P. C., Mark, R., ... & Stanley, H. E. (2000). PhysioBank, PhysioToolkit, and PhysioNet: Components of a new research resource for complex physiologic signals. Circulation [Online]. 101 (23), pp. e215–e220.
Data Description
This database contains postural sway measurements for 15 healthy young (mean age 23, standard deviation 2), and 12 healthy elderly (mean age 73, standard deviation 3) volunteers. Each subject's postural sway was recorded during a test of 10 minutes for the young subjects, or 5 minutes for the elderly subjects, in all cases with a 2-minute seated break midway through the test. Each test was divided into 30-second trials, and each file of the database contains data for one of these 30-second trials.
In each shoe, subjects wore a gel-based insole, which included vibrating elements (tactors) beneath the forefoot and heel. The vibrations were generated using a digitized uniform white noise signal, low-pass filtered with 100 Hz cutoff. Before beginning the test, each subject adjusted the amplitude of the vibrations produced by the tactors to a level that could be felt only slightly. The stimulation level was then reduced by 10% so that the vibrations were subsensory.
The data from the young and elderly subjects are contained within the yng and eh (elderly healthy) directories respectively. Within these, separate directories for each subject contain the data for that subject. For each subject, subsensory vibration was applied during half of the 30-second trials (those recorded in the database files within the STIM subdirectories of the subject directories), and no stimulus was applied during the remaining (control) trials (those in the NULL subdirectories). The sequence of noise and control trials was randomized in a pairwise fashion, so that subjects were not aware of the presence or absence of the stimulus in any given trial.
An example should make this arrangement clear. Within the eh directory are subdirectories for each of the 12 healthy elderly volunteers, designated as MT1502, MT1503, etc. Within the directory for the first of these, MT1502, are subdirectories NULL and STIM, containing control and noise trial data for subject MT1502. Within each of these are the data files, with names that indicate their positions within the sequence of trials for that subject. For example, the data for the first trial, fMT150201.txt, are found in the NULL subdirectory, so this indicates that subject MT1502's first trial was a control trial.
The data files are two-column text files, and the data are measurements of the displacement of a reflective marker placed on the subject's shoulder to characterize whole body postural sway. A Vicon motion analysis system was used to record the mediolateral (side-to-side) and anteroposterior (front-to-back) displacement (normalized by the height of the marker) in columns 1 and 2 respectively, at a rate of 60 samples per second, throughout each 30 second trial.
The data may be downloaded as individual files, from the eh and yng directories, or as a gzip-compressed tar archive of the entire data set (nesfdb.tar.gz, 6.5 Mb).
Access
Access Policy:
Anyone can access the files, as long as they conform to the terms of the specified license.
License (for files):
Open Data Commons Attribution License v1.0
Discovery
DOI (version 1.0.0):
https://doi.org/10.13026/C21S3G
Corresponding Author
Files
Total uncompressed size: 32.2 MB.
Access the files
- Download the ZIP file (32.3 MB)
- Access the files using the Google Cloud Storage Browser here. Login with a Google account is required.
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Access the data using the Google Cloud command line tools (please refer to the gsutil
documentation for guidance):
gsutil -m -u YOUR_PROJECT_ID cp -r gs://nesfdb-1.0.0.physionet.org DESTINATION
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Download the files using your terminal:
wget -r -N -c -np https://physionet.org/files/nesfdb/1.0.0/
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Download the files using AWS command line tools:
aws s3 sync --no-sign-request s3://physionet-open/nesfdb/1.0.0/ DESTINATION
Name | Size | Modified |
---|---|---|
Parent Directory | ||
fMT150902.txt (download) | 63.3 KB | 2004-10-29 |
fMT150903.txt (download) | 63.3 KB | 2004-10-29 |
fMT150905.txt (download) | 63.3 KB | 2004-10-29 |
fMT150909.txt (download) | 63.3 KB | 2004-10-29 |
fMT150911.txt (download) | 63.3 KB | 2004-10-29 |