DOI: 10.3390/s26133987 ISSN: 1424-8220

Development, Reliability, and Validity Assessment of a Portable 3D Camera-Based System for Quantifying Postural Sway and Balance

Vivek Ganesh Sonar, Vibhor Agrawal, Krushal Kalkani, Javad Hashemi, Abhijit Pandya

Accurate assessment of postural sway is essential for evaluating balance disorders, rehabilitation outcomes, and fall risk. Traditional laboratory-based motion capture systems provide precise center-of-pressure (CoP) measurements, but are expensive, non-portable, and impractical for widespread clinical use. This study describes the development and testing (reliability and validity) of a portable three-dimensional (3D) camera system (Intel RealSense D415) for quantifying sway and balance. Test–retest reliability was evaluated in healthy adults (n = 10; 6 males, 4 females; mean age 22.3 ± 1.6 years), yielding intraclass correlation coefficients ICC = 0.84–0.86 (95% CI: 0.61–0.95). Concurrent validity, established against a laboratory-based optical motion capture system (Optotrak), demonstrated strong correlations with a mean absolute percentage error of 10.5% relative to Optotrak-derived path length measurements and high levels of agreement. Operating at 30 Hz with end-to-end latency of <40 ms, the RealSense-based system provides a reliable, valid, and portable alternative to lab-based systems. Low-cost markerless motion capture systems based on standard RGB cameras have been validated for postural risk assessment, showing good consistency with gold-standard Vicon systems. These preliminary findings suggest that the system shows promise as a low-cost alternative; however, further validation in clinical populations is required before clinical deployment.

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