HHARNet: Taking inspiration from Inception and Dense Networks for Human Activity Recognition using Inertial Sensors

Author(s):  
Hamza Ali Imran ◽  
Usama Latif
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hamza Ali Imran ◽  
Usama Latif

Human Activity Recognition (HAR) an important area of research in the light of enormous applications that it provides, such as health monitoring, sports, entertainment, efficient human computer interface, child care, education and many more. Use of Computer Vision for Human Activity Recognition has many limitations. The use of inertial sensors which include accelerometer and gyroscopic sensors for HAR is becoming the norm these days considering their benefits over traditional Computer Vision techniques. In this paper we have proposed a 1-dimensional Convolutions Neural Network which is inspired by two state-of-the art architectures proposed for image classifications; namely Inception Net and Dense Net. We have evaluated its performance on two different publicly available datasets for HAR. Precision, Recall, F1-measure and accuracies are reported.<br>


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hamza Ali Imran ◽  
Usama Latif

Human Activity Recognition (HAR) an important area of research in the light of enormous applications that it provides, such as health monitoring, sports, entertainment, efficient human computer interface, child care, education and many more. Use of Computer Vision for Human Activity Recognition has many limitations. The use of inertial sensors which include accelerometer and gyroscopic sensors for HAR is becoming the norm these days considering their benefits over traditional Computer Vision techniques. In this paper we have proposed a 1-dimensional Convolutions Neural Network which is inspired by two state-of-the art architectures proposed for image classifications; namely Inception Net and Dense Net. We have evaluated its performance on two different publicly available datasets for HAR. Precision, Recall, F1-measure and accuracies are reported.<br>


2021 ◽  
Vol 25 (2) ◽  
pp. 38-42
Author(s):  
Hyeokhyen Kwon ◽  
Catherine Tong ◽  
Harish Haresamudram ◽  
Yan Gao ◽  
Gregory D. Abowd ◽  
...  

Today's smartphones and wearable devices come equipped with an array of inertial sensors, along with IMU-based Human Activity Recognition models to monitor everyday activities. However, such models rely on large amounts of annotated training data, which require considerable time and effort for collection. One has to recruit human subjects, define clear protocols for the subjects to follow, and manually annotate the collected data, along with the administrative work that goes into organizing such a recording.


2020 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 22
Author(s):  
Manuel Gil-Martín ◽  
José Antúnez-Durango ◽  
Rubén San-Segundo

Deep learning techniques have been widely applied to Human Activity Recognition (HAR), but a specific challenge appears when HAR systems are trained and tested with different subjects. This paper describes and evaluates several techniques based on deep learning algorithms for adapting and selecting the training data used to generate a HAR system using accelerometer recordings. This paper proposes two alternatives: autoencoders and Generative Adversarial Networks (GANs). Both alternatives are based on deep neural networks including convolutional layers for feature extraction and fully-connected layers for classification. Fast Fourier Transform (FFT) is used as a transformation of acceleration data to provide an appropriate input data to the deep neural network. This study has used acceleration recordings from hand, chest and ankle sensors included in the Physical Activity Monitoring Data Set (PAMAP2) dataset. This is a public dataset including recordings from nine subjects while performing 12 activities such as walking, running, sitting, ascending stairs, or ironing. The evaluation has been performed using a Leave-One-Subject-Out (LOSO) cross-validation: all recordings from a subject are used as testing subset and recordings from the rest of the subjects are used as training subset. The obtained results suggest that strategies using autoencoders to adapt training data to testing data improve some users’ performance. Moreover, training data selection algorithms with autoencoders provide significant improvements. The GAN approach, using the generator or discriminator module, also provides improvement in selection experiments.


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