Improvised methods for tackling big data stream mining challenges: case study of human activity recognition

2016 ◽  
Vol 72 (10) ◽  
pp. 3927-3959 ◽  
Author(s):  
Simon Fong ◽  
Kexing Liu ◽  
Kyungeun Cho ◽  
Raymond Wong ◽  
Sabah Mohammed ◽  
...  
Author(s):  
Lidia Bajenaru ◽  
Ciprian Dobre ◽  
Radu-Ioan Ciobanu ◽  
Georgiana Dedu ◽  
Silviu-George Pantelimon ◽  
...  

Sensors ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 20 (22) ◽  
pp. 6486
Author(s):  
Martin Khannouz ◽  
Tristan Glatard

This paper evaluates data stream classifiers from the perspective of connected devices, focusing on the use case of Human Activity Recognition. We measure both the classification performance and resource consumption (runtime, memory, and power) of five usual stream classification algorithms, implemented in a consistent library, and applied to two real human activity datasets and three synthetic datasets. Regarding classification performance, the results show the overall superiority of the Hoeffding Tree, the Mondrian forest, and the Naïve Bayes classifiers over the Feedforward Neural Network and the Micro Cluster Nearest Neighbor classifiers on four datasets out of six, including the real ones. In addition, the Hoeffding Tree and—to some extent—the Micro Cluster Nearest Neighbor, are the only classifiers that can recover from a concept drift. Overall, the three leading classifiers still perform substantially worse than an offline classifier on the real datasets. Regarding resource consumption, the Hoeffding Tree and the Mondrian forest are the most memory intensive and have the longest runtime; however, no difference in power consumption is found between classifiers. We conclude that stream learning for Human Activity Recognition on connected objects is challenged by two factors which could lead to interesting future work: a high memory consumption and low F1 scores overall.


Author(s):  
Sabrina Azzi ◽  
Abdenour Bouzouane ◽  
Sylvain Giroux ◽  
Cindy Dallaire ◽  
Bruno Bouchard

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