Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Ambient and smartphone sensor assisted ADL recognition in multi-inhabitant smart environments.
Roy, Nirmalya; Misra, Archan; Cook, Diane.
Afiliação
  • Roy N; Department of Information Systems, University of Maryland, Baltimore County, Baltimore, USA.
  • Misra A; School of Information Systems, Singapore Management University, Singapore, Singapore.
  • Cook D; School of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, Washington State University, Pullman, USA.
J Ambient Intell Humaniz Comput ; 7(1): 1-19, 2016 Feb.
Article em En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27042240
ABSTRACT
Activity recognition in smart environments is an evolving research problem due to the advancement and proliferation of sensing, monitoring and actuation technologies to make it possible for large scale and real deployment. While activities in smart home are interleaved, complex and volatile; the number of inhabitants in the environment is also dynamic. A key challenge in designing robust smart home activity recognition approaches is to exploit the users' spatiotemporal behavior and location, focus on the availability of multitude of devices capable of providing different dimensions of information and fulfill the underpinning needs for scaling the system beyond a single user or a home environment. In this paper, we propose a hybrid approach for recognizing complex activities of daily living (ADL), that lie in between the two extremes of intensive use of body-worn sensors and the use of ambient sensors. Our approach harnesses the power of simple ambient sensors (e.g., motion sensors) to provide additional 'hidden' context (e.g., room-level location) of an individual, and then combines this context with smartphone-based sensing of micro-level postural/locomotive states. The major novelty is our focus on multi-inhabitant environments, where we show how the use of spatiotemporal constraints along with multitude of data sources can be used to significantly improve the accuracy and computational overhead of traditional activity recognition based approaches such as coupled-hidden Markov models. Experimental results on two separate smart home datasets demonstrate that this approach improves the accuracy of complex ADL classification by over 30 %, compared to pure smartphone-based solutions.

Texto completo: 1 Base de dados: MEDLINE Idioma: En Revista: J Ambient Intell Humaniz Comput Ano de publicação: 2016 Tipo de documento: Article País de afiliação: Estados Unidos

Texto completo: 1 Base de dados: MEDLINE Idioma: En Revista: J Ambient Intell Humaniz Comput Ano de publicação: 2016 Tipo de documento: Article País de afiliação: Estados Unidos