Publication | Closed Access
Kitchen Activity Detection for Healthcare using a Low-Power Radar-Enabled Sensor Network
35
Citations
19
References
2019
Year
Unknown Venue
Smart SensorEngineeringMachine LearningHuman ActivityWearable TechnologyHome AutomationHuman MonitoringSensor NetworksData SciencePattern RecognitionKitchen Activity DetectionInternet Of ThingsActivity DetectionMachine VisionAssistive TechnologyComputer ScienceMobile ComputingDeep LearningSignal ProcessingComputer VisionHuman Activity DetectionMobile SensingSmart LivingHealth MonitoringActivity Recognition
Human activity detection plays a crucial role in the recognition of activities of daily living (ADLs). In the past ten years, research on activity detection in the home was achieved through the data aggregation from several different sensors (presence sensors, door contacts, appliances tagging, cameras, wearable beacons, mobile phones, etc.). However, the cost of deployment and maintenance of a multitude of sensor devices and the intrusiveness they can infer are quite high. Research on minimal and non-intrusive sensing for recognition of ADLs are vital for the future of remote care. In this paper, we propose a minimal and non-intrusive low-power low-cost radar-based sensing network system that uses an innovative approach for recognizing human activity in the home. We applied our novel approach to the challenging problem of kitchen activity recognition and investigated fifteen different activities. We designed and trained a deep convolutional neural network (DCNN) that classifies different activities based on their distinct micro-Doppler signatures. We achieved an overall classification rate of 92.8% in activity recognition. Most importantly, in nearly real-time, our approach successfully recognized human activities in more than 89% of the time.
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