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The Significance and Limitations of Sensor-based Agitation Detection in People Living with Dementia.

Agitation, a commonly observed behaviour in people living with dementia (PLwD), is frequently interpreted as a response to physiological, environmental, or emotional stress. Agitation has the potential to pose health risks to both individuals and their caregivers, and can contribute to increased caregiver burden and stress. Early detection of agitation can facilitate with timely intervention, which has the potential to prevent escalation to other challenging behaviors. Wearable and ambient sensors are frequently used to monitor physiological and behavioral conditions and the collected signals can be engaged to detect the onset of an agitation episode. This paper delves into the current sensor-based methods for detecting agitation in PLwD, and reviews the strengths and limitations of existing works. Future directions to enable real-time agitation detection to empower caregivers are also deliberated, with a focus on their potential to reduce caregiver burden by facilitating early support, assistance and interventions to timely manage agitation episodes in PLwD.

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