Title :
A Dynamic Evidential Network for Fall Detection
Author :
Cavalcante Aguilar, Paulo Armando ; Boudy, J. ; Istrate, D. ; Dorizzi, Bernadette ; Moura Mota, Joao Cesar
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electron. & Phys., Telecom SudParis, Evry, France
Abstract :
This study is part of the development of a remote home healthcare monitoring application designed to detect distress situations through several types of sensors. The multisensor fusion can provide more accurate and reliable information compared to information provided by each sensor separately. Furthermore, data from multiple heterogeneous sensors present in the remote home healthcare monitoring systems have different degrees of imperfection and trust. Among the multisensor fusion methods, Dempster-Shafer theory (DST) is currently considered the most appropriate for representing and processing the imperfect information. Based on a graphical representation of the DST called evidential networks, a structure of heterogeneous data fusion from multiple sensors for fall detection has been proposed. The evidential networks, implemented on our remote medical monitoring platform, are also proposed in this paper to maximize the performance of automatic fall detection and thus make the system more reliable. However, the presence of noise, the variability of recorded signals by the sensors, and the failing or unreliable sensors may thwart the evidential networks performance. In addition, the sensors signals nonstationary nature may degrade the experimental conditions. To compensate the nonstationary effect, the time evolution is considered by introducing the dynamic evidential network which was evaluated by the simulated fall scenarios corresponding to various use cases.
Keywords :
health care; inference mechanisms; medical disorders; medical signal processing; patient monitoring; sensor fusion; uncertainty handling; Dempster-Shafer theory; automatic fall detection; dynamic evidential network; evidential network performance; graphical representation; heterogeneous data fusion structure; multiple heterogeneous sensors; multisensor fusion methods; noise; nonstationary effect; remote home healthcare monitoring application; remote home healthcare monitoring systems; remote medical monitoring platform; signal recording; Biomedical measurement; Databases; Medical services; Reliability; Sensor fusion; Sensor phenomena and characterization; Dempster–Shafer theory (DST); dynamic evidential networks (DENs); fall detection; heterogeneous sensors data fusion; remote healthcare monitoring; temporal belief filter (TBF);
Journal_Title :
Biomedical and Health Informatics, IEEE Journal of
DOI :
10.1109/JBHI.2013.2283055