Title :
Child Activity Recognition Based on Cooperative Fusion Model of a Triaxial Accelerometer and a Barometric Pressure Sensor
Author :
Yunyoung Nam ; Jung Wook Park
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Stony Brook Univ., Stony Brook, NY, USA
Abstract :
This paper presents a child activity recognition approach using a single 3-axis accelerometer and a barometric pressure sensor worn on a waist of the body to prevent child accidents such as unintentional injuries at home. Labeled accelerometer data are collected from children of both sexes up to the age of 16 to 29 months. To recognize daily activities, mean, standard deviation, and slope of time-domain features are calculated over sliding windows. In addition, the FFT analysis is adopted to extract frequency-domain features of the aggregated data, and then energy and correlation of acceleration data are calculated. Child activities are classified into 11 daily activities which are wiggling, rolling, standing still, standing up, sitting down, walking, toddling, crawling, climbing up, climbing down, and stopping. The overall accuracy of activity recognition was 98.43% using only a single- wearable triaxial accelerometer sensor and a barometric pressure sensor with a support vector machine.
Keywords :
accelerometers; biomedical equipment; fast Fourier transforms; feature extraction; gait analysis; geriatrics; medical computing; pattern classification; pressure sensors; support vector machines; FFT; barometric pressure sensor; child accidents; child activity recognition; climbing down activity; climbing up activity; cooperative fusion model; crawling activity; frequency-domain feature extraction; rolling activity; single 3-axis accelerometer; single-wearable triaxial accelerometer sensor; sitting down activity; sliding windows; standing still activity; standing up activity; stopping activity; support vector machine; time-domain features; toddling activity; waist; walking activity; wiggling activity; Acceleration; Accelerometers; Feature extraction; Legged locomotion; Pediatrics; Pressure measurement; Standards; Accelerometer; activity classification; activity recognition; baby care; child care; wearable device; Accelerometry; Activities of Daily Living; Child, Preschool; Female; Humans; Infant; Locomotion; Male; Monitoring, Ambulatory; Pressure; Support Vector Machines;
Journal_Title :
Biomedical and Health Informatics, IEEE Journal of
DOI :
10.1109/JBHI.2012.2235075