7 research outputs found

    Radar-Based Human Motion Recognition by Using Vital Signs with ECA-CNN

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    Radar technologies reserve a large latent capacity in dealing with human motion recognition (HMR). For the problem that it is challenging to quickly and accurately classify various complex motions, an HMR algorithm combing the attention mechanism and convolution neural network (ECA-CNN) using vital signs is proposed. Firstly, the original radar signal is obtained from human chest wall displacement. Chirp-Z Transform (CZT) algorithm is adopted to refine and amplify the narrow band spectrum region of interest in the global spectrum of the signal, and accurate information on the specific band is extracted. Secondly, six time-domain features were extracted for the neural network. Finally, an ECA-CNN is designed to improve classification accuracy, with a small size, fast speed, and high accuracy of 98%. This method can improve the classification accuracy and efficiency of the network to a large extent. Besides, the size of this network is 100 kb, which is convenient to integrate into the embedded devices

    DeepMoCap: Deep Optical Motion Capture Using Multiple Depth Sensors and Retro-Reflectors

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    In this paper, a marker-based, single-person optical motion capture method (DeepMoCap) is proposed using multiple spatio-temporally aligned infrared-depth sensors and retro-reflective straps and patches (reflectors). DeepMoCap explores motion capture by automatically localizing and labeling reflectors on depth images and, subsequently, on 3D space. Introducing a non-parametric representation to encode the temporal correlation among pairs of colorized depthmaps and 3D optical flow frames, a multi-stage Fully Convolutional Network (FCN) architecture is proposed to jointly learn reflector locations and their temporal dependency among sequential frames. The extracted reflector 2D locations are spatially mapped in 3D space, resulting in robust 3D optical data extraction. The subject’s motion is efficiently captured by applying a template-based fitting technique on the extracted optical data. Two datasets have been created and made publicly available for evaluation purposes; one comprising multi-view depth and 3D optical flow annotated images (DMC2.5D), and a second, consisting of spatio-temporally aligned multi-view depth images along with skeleton, inertial and ground truth MoCap data (DMC3D). The FCN model outperforms its competitors on the DMC2.5D dataset using 2D Percentage of Correct Keypoints (PCK) metric, while the motion capture outcome is evaluated against RGB-D and inertial data fusion approaches on DMC3D, outperforming the next best method by 4.5% in total 3D PCK accuracy

    Integrating water-energy-nexus in carbon footprint analysis in water utility company

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    The purpose of this paper is to highlight the water-energy-nexus within the context of carbon footprint methodology and water utility industry. In particular, the carbon management for water utility industry is crucial in reducing carbon emission within the upstream water distribution system. The concept of water-energy nexus alone however can be misleading due to exclusion of indirect and embodied energy involved in the water production. The study highlights the total energy use within water supply system as well as embedded carbon emission through carbon footprint methodology. The case study approach is used as a research method. The carbon footprint analysis includes data collection from water utility company; and data identification of direct and indirect carbon emission from corporation operation. The result indicates that the indirect and embodied energy may not be significant in certain operation area but the energy use may be ambiguous when these elements are excluded. Integrating carbon footprint methodology within the water supply system can improve the understanding on water-energy-nexus when direct and indirect energy use is included in the analysis. This paper aims to benefit academics, government agencies and particularly water utility companies in integrating carbon footprint analysis in water production

    Hand-finger pose tracking using inertial and magnetic sensors

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    Human Motion Tracking by Multiple RGBD Cameras

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