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Analysis of Optimal Sensor Positions for Activity Classification and Application on a Different Data Collection Scenario
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Metadata
Document Title
Analysis of Optimal Sensor Positions for Activity Classification and Application on a Different Data Collection Scenario
Author
Pannurat N, Thiemjarus S, Nantajeewarawat E, Anantavrasilp I
Name from Authors Collection
Affiliations
Thammasat University; National Science & Technology Development Agency - Thailand; National Electronics & Computer Technology Center (NECTEC); King Mongkuts Institute of Technology Ladkrabang
Type
Article
Source Title
SENSORS
Year
2017
Volume
17
Issue
4
Page
-
Open Access
Green Published, Green Submitted, gold
Publisher
MDPI
DOI
10.3390/s17040774
Format
Abstract
This paper focuses on optimal sensor positioning for monitoring activities of daily living and investigates different combinations of features and models on different sensor positions, i.e., the side of the waist, front of the waist, chest, thigh, head, upper arm, wrist, and ankle. Nineteen features are extracted, and the feature importance is measured by using the Relief-F feature selection algorithm. Eight classification algorithms are evaluated on a dataset collected from young subjects and a dataset collected from elderly subjects, with two different experimental settings. To deal with different sampling rates, signals with a high data rate are down-sampled and a transformation matrix is used for aligning signals to the same coordinate system. The thigh, chest, side of the waist, and front of the waist are the best four sensor positions for the first dataset (young subjects), with average accuracy values greater than 96%. The best model obtained from the first dataset for the side of the waist is validated on the second dataset (elderly subjects). The most appropriate number of features for each sensor position is reported. The results provide a reference for building activity recognition models for different sensor positions, as well as for data acquired from different hardware platforms and subject groups.
Funding Sponsor
Thailand Research Fund (TRF), under the Royal Golden Jubilee Ph.D. Program [PHD/0247/2552]; National Research University Project - Thailand Office of Higher Education Commission; Centre of Excellence in Intelligent Informatics, Speech and Language Technology and Service Innovation (CILS), Thammasat University; Anandamahidol Foundation
License
CC BY
Rights
Authors
Publication Source
WOS