scholarly journals HF-SPHR: Hybrid Features for Sustainable Physical Healthcare Pattern Recognition Using Deep Belief Networks

2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (4) ◽  
pp. 1699
Author(s):  
Madiha Javeed ◽  
Munkhjargal Gochoo ◽  
Ahmad Jalal ◽  
Kibum Kim

The daily life-log routines of elderly individuals are susceptible to numerous complications in their physical healthcare patterns. Some of these complications can cause injuries, followed by extensive and expensive recovery stages. It is important to identify physical healthcare patterns that can describe and convey the exact state of an individual’s physical health while they perform their daily life activities. In this paper, we propose a novel Sustainable Physical Healthcare Pattern Recognition (SPHR) approach using a hybrid features model that is capable of distinguishing multiple physical activities based on a multiple wearable sensors system. Initially, we acquired raw data from well-known datasets, i.e., mobile health and human gait databases comprised of multiple human activities. The proposed strategy includes data pre-processing, hybrid feature detection, and feature-to-feature fusion and reduction, followed by codebook generation and classification, which can recognize sustainable physical healthcare patterns. Feature-to-feature fusion unites the cues from all of the sensors, and Gaussian mixture models are used for the codebook generation. For the classification, we recommend deep belief networks with restricted Boltzmann machines for five hidden layers. Finally, the results are compared with state-of-the-art techniques in order to demonstrate significant improvements in accuracy for physical healthcare pattern recognition. The experiments show that the proposed architecture attained improved accuracy rates for both datasets, and that it represents a significant sustainable physical healthcare pattern recognition (SPHR) approach. The anticipated system has potential for use in human–machine interaction domains such as continuous movement recognition, pattern-based surveillance, mobility assistance, and robot control systems.

Author(s):  
Mahboubeh Farahat ◽  
Ramin Halavati

Most current speech recognition systems use Hidden Markov Models (HMMs) to deal with the temporal variability of speech and Gaussian mixture models (GMMs) to determine how well each state of each HMM fits a frame or a short window of frames of coefficients that represents the acoustic input. In these systems acoustic inputs are represented by Mel Frequency Cepstral Coefficients temporal spectrogram known as frames. But MFCC is not robust to noise. Consequently, with different train and test conditions the accuracy of speech recognition systems decreases. On the other hand, using MFCCs of larger window of frames in GMMs needs more computational power. In this paper, Deep Belief Networks (DBNs) are used to extract discriminative information from larger window of frames. Nonlinear transformations lead to high-order and low-dimensional features which are robust to variation of input speech. Multiple speaker isolated word recognition tasks with 100 and 200 words in clean and noisy environments has been used to test this method. The experimental results indicate that this new method of feature encoding result in much better word recognition accuracy.


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