SSTeP KiZ: smart sensor technology in tele-psychotherapy for children and adolescents with obsessive-compulsive disorder

Research Area

Clinical Movement Control and real-life Behavior Analysis for Assistive Systems

Researchers

Annika Thierfelder; Winfried Ilg; Michael Stettler; Jens Seemann; Martin A. Giese;

Collaborators

Karsten Hollmann; Carolin Hohnecker; Annika Alt; Anja Pascher; Tobias Renner[; Jonas Primbs; Michael Menth; Björn Severitt; Enkelejda Kasneci

Description

With sensors that can be worn in everyday life and an intelligent analysis of multi-modal sensor data, SSTeP KiZ aims to significantly improve the treatment options for patients with obsessive-compulsive disorder. We support telemedical treatment of affected children and adolescents in their home environment by integrating data collected with wearables.

With a combination of movement data, image acquisition, eye tracking and physiological markers such as heart rate, heart rate variability and pupillometry, we draw conclusions about emotional state and stress reactions to symptom-triggering stimuli. This enables us to improve the feedback to both therapist and patient, and therefore further on the progress of therapy.

The extraction and integration of sensor data from the ecologically valid home environment enables a considerable improvement in therapy planning and implementation, especially for children and adolescents. Apart from giving objective information and continuous feedback, recording patients during exercises in their everyday life environment gives therapists the opportunity to gain insight into unobserved behavior of their patients.

While single modalities are useful to monitor patients during therapy, only the multimodal integration of the different wearables can give us a holistic picture of the patients’ behavior. Using multivariate analyses and machine learning techniques, we approach the problem of using all modalities to analyze obsessive-compulsive behavior.

Given the individual nature of obsessive-compulsive disorders, we do not only attempt to find disease-specific patterns, but also to identify patient-specific symptom triggers and to develop personalized models of the stress reaction to exposure situations. Upon development of these models, we can then give more sophisticated feedback about the emotional state of each patient in a personalized manner.

 

 

This project has received funding from the German Federal Ministry of Health, ZMWI1-2520DAT700.

Publications

Klein, C. S., Hollmann, K., K\"uhnhausen, J., Alt, A. K., Pascher, A., Ilg, W. et al. (2023). Smart Sensory Technology in Tele-Psychotherapy of Children and Adolescents with Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD): A Feasibility Study, SSRN.
Smart Sensory Technology in Tele-Psychotherapy of Children and Adolescents with Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD): A Feasibility Study
Abstract:

Background: Telemedicine interventions support behavioral state-of-the-art treatment of obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) as therapy can be delivered in the patients' home environment, allowing for more ecologically valid symptom actualization and access to experts even in rural areas. Sensors to indicate a patient´s emotional state and gaze direction during exposures with response prevention help to adapt therapy individually and to prevent avoidance behavior. This study will investigate the feasibility and acceptability of sensor-based telemedical treatment for children with OCD in the home setting. Methods: We plan to develop the therapy system with 10 healthy children and 5-10 children with OCD, aged 12-18 years, and then to evaluate it by treating 20 children with OCD of the same age group in 14 weekly therapy sessions via teleconference. We will use eye trackers to record the patient´s gaze and pupillometry, while the heart rate is captured by an ECG chest belt to identify stress responses. Inertial sensors capture movements to detect behavioral patterns. An app is used to record the children's self-rated symptoms and emotional state on a daily basis. Pre- and post-study questionnaires on obsessive-compulsive symptoms, feasibility and acceptance of the therapy by children, parents and therapists will be evaluated. Conclusion: We expect this therapeutic approach to show good feasibility and significant symptom reduction, as well as improvement for psychotherapeutic interventions through direct feedback of physiological responses within therapy sessions. We will further explore the underlying mechanisms in OCD treatment before applying them to other disorders.

Authors: Carolin S. Klein Karsten Hollmann Jan K\"uhnhausen Annika K. Alt Anja Pascher Winfried Ilg; Annika Thierfelder; Martin A. Giese; Helene Passon Christian Matthias Ernst Enkelejda Kasneci Björn Severitt Martin Holderried Wolfgang Bethge Heinrich Lautenbacher Ursula Wörz Jonas Primbs Michael Menth Caterina Gawrilow Annette Conzelmann Gottfried M. Barth Tobias J. Renner
Type of Publication: Technical Report
Institution: SSRN
Type of Publication: preprint
Thierfelder, A., Primbs, J., Severitt, B., Hohnecker, C. S., K\"uhnhausen, J., Alt, A. K. et al. (2022). Multimodal sensor-based identification of stress and compulsive actions in children with obsessive-compulsive disorder for telemedical treatment. 44th Annual International Conference of the IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society.
Multimodal sensor-based identification of stress and compulsive actions in children with obsessive-compulsive disorder for telemedical treatment
Abstract:

In modern psychotherapy, digital health technology offers advanced and personalized therapy options, increasing availability as well as ecological validity. These aspects have proven to be highly relevant for children and adolescents with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). Exposure and Response Prevention therapy, which is the state-of-the-art treatment for OCD, builds on the reconstruction of everyday life exposure to anxious situations. However, while compulsive behavior predominantly occurs in home environments, exposure situations during therapy are limited to clinical settings. Telemedical treatment allows to shift from this limited exposure reconstruction to exposure situations in real life. In the SSTeP KiZ study (smart sensor technology in telepsychotherapy for children and adolescents with OCD), we combine video therapy with wearable sensors delivering physiological and behavioral measures to objectively determine the stress level of patients. The setup allows to gain information from exposure to stress in a realistic environment both during and outside of therapy sessions. In a first pilot study, we explored the sensitivity of individual sensor modalities to different levels of stress and anxiety. For this, we captured the obsessive-compulsive behavior of five adolescents with an ECG chest belt, inertial sensors capturing hand movements, and an eye tracker. Despite their prototypical nature, our results deliver strong evidence that the examined sensor modalities yield biomarkers allowing for personalized detection and quantification of stress and anxiety. This opens up future possibilities to evaluate the severity of individual compulsive behavior based on multi-variate state classification in real-life situations.

Authors: Annika Thierfelder; Jonas Primbs Björn Severitt Carolin Sarah Hohnecker Jan K\"uhnhausen Annika Kristin Alt Anja Pascher Ursula Wörz Helene Passon Jens Seemann; Christian Ernst Heinrich Lautenbacher Martin Holderried Enkelejda Kasneci Martin A. Giese; Andreas Bulling Michael Menth Gottfried Maria Barth Winfried Ilg; Karsten Hollmann Tobias Johann Renner
Research Areas: Uncategorized
Type of Publication: Article
Journal: 44th Annual International Conference of the IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society
Year: 2022
Primbs, J., Ilg, W., Thierfelder, A., Severitt, B., Hohnecker, C. S., Alt, A. K. et al. (2022). The SSTeP-KiZ System—Secure Real-Time Communication Based on Open Web Standards for Multimodal Sensor-Assisted Tele-Psychothera. Sensors, 22(24), 9589.
The SSTeP-KiZ System—Secure Real-Time Communication Based on Open Web Standards for Multimodal Sensor-Assisted Tele-Psychothera
Abstract:

In this manuscript, we describe the soft- and hardware architecture as well as the implementation of a modern Internet of Medical Things (IoMT) system for sensor-assisted telepsychotherapy. It enables telepsychotherapy sessions in which the patient exercises therapy-relevant behaviors in their home environment under the remote supervision of the therapist. Wearable sensor information (electrocardiogram (ECG), movement sensors, and eye tracking) is streamed in real time to the therapist to deliver objective information about specific behavior-triggering situations and the stress level of the patients. We describe the IT infrastructure of the system which uses open standards such as WebRTC and OpenID Connect (OIDC). We also describe the system’s security concept, its container-based deployment, and demonstrate performance analyses. The system is used in the ongoing study SSTeP-KiZ (smart sensor technology in telepsychotherapy for children and adolescents with obsessive-compulsive disorder) and shows sufficient technical performance.

Authors: Jonas Primbs Winfried Ilg; Annika Thierfelder; Björn Severitt Carolin Sarah Hohnecker Annika Kristin Alt Anja Pascher Ursula Wörz Heinrich Lautenbacher Karsten Hollmann Gottfried Maria Barth Tobias Renner Michael Menth
Type of Publication: Article

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