4.6 Article

Sustainable Wearable System: Human Behavior Modeling for Life-Logging Activities Using K-Ary Tree Hashing Classifier

Journal

SUSTAINABILITY
Volume 12, Issue 24, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/su122410324

Keywords

Discrete Hartely Transform; inertial sensors; Probability Based Incremental Learning; sustainable surveillance system; K-Ary tree hashing classifier

Funding

  1. Basic Science Research Program through the National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF) - Ministry of Education [2018R1D1A1A02085645]

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Human behavior modeling (HBM) is a challenging classification task for researchers seeking to develop sustainable systems that precisely monitor and record human life-logs. In recent years, several models have been proposed; however, HBM remains an inspiring problem that is only partly solved. This paper proposes a novel framework of human behavior modeling based on wearable inertial sensors; the system framework is composed of data acquisition, feature extraction, optimization and classification stages. First, inertial data is filtered via three different filters, i.e., Chebyshev, Elliptic and Bessel filters. Next, six different features from time and frequency domains are extracted to determine the maximum optimal values. Then, the Probability Based Incremental Learning (PBIL) optimizer and the K-Ary tree hashing classifier are applied to model different human activities. The proposed model is evaluated on two benchmark datasets, namely DALIAC and PAMPA2, and one self-annotated dataset, namely, IM-LifeLog, respectively. For evaluation, we used a leave-one-out cross validation scheme. The experimental results show that our model outperformed existing state-of-the-art methods with accuracy rates of 94.23%, 94.07% and 96.40% over DALIAC, PAMPA2 and IM-LifeLog datasets, respectively. The proposed system can be used in healthcare, physical activity detection, surveillance systems and medical fitness fields.

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