Temporal convolutional networks predict dynamic oxygen uptake response from wearable sensors across exercise intensities

时间卷积网络预测可穿戴传感器在不同运动强度下的动态摄氧量反应

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Abstract

Oxygen consumption ([Formula: see text]) provides established clinical and physiological indicators of cardiorespiratory function and exercise capacity. However, [Formula: see text] monitoring is largely limited to specialized laboratory settings, making its widespread monitoring elusive. Here we investigate temporal prediction of [Formula: see text] from wearable sensors during cycle ergometer exercise using a temporal convolutional network (TCN). Cardiorespiratory signals were acquired from a smart shirt with integrated textile sensors alongside ground-truth [Formula: see text] from a metabolic system on 22 young healthy adults. Participants performed one ramp-incremental and three pseudorandom binary sequence exercise protocols to assess a range of [Formula: see text] dynamics. A TCN model was developed using causal convolutions across an effective history length to model the time-dependent nature of [Formula: see text]. Optimal history length was determined through minimum validation loss across hyperparameter values. The best performing model encoded 218 s history length (TCN-VO2 A), with 187, 97, and 76 s yielding <3% deviation from the optimal validation loss. TCN-VO2 A showed strong prediction accuracy (mean, 95% CI) across all exercise intensities (-22 ml min(-)(1), [-262, 218]), spanning transitions from low-moderate (-23 ml min(-)(1), [-250, 204]), low-high (14 ml min(-)(1), [-252, 280]), ventilatory threshold-high (-49 ml min(-)(1), [-274, 176]), and maximal (-32 ml min(-)(1), [-261, 197]) exercise. Second-by-second classification of physical activity across 16,090 s of predicted [Formula: see text] was able to discern between vigorous, moderate, and light activity with high accuracy (94.1%). This system enables quantitative aerobic activity monitoring in non-laboratory settings, when combined with tidal volume and heart rate reserve calibration, across a range of exercise intensities using wearable sensors for monitoring exercise prescription adherence and personal fitness.

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