4,376 research outputs found
Surveying human habit modeling and mining techniques in smart spaces
A smart space is an environment, mainly equipped with Internet-of-Things (IoT) technologies, able to provide services to humans, helping them to perform daily tasks by monitoring the space and autonomously executing actions, giving suggestions and sending alarms. Approaches suggested in the literature may differ in terms of required facilities, possible applications, amount of human intervention required, ability to support multiple users at the same time adapting to changing needs. In this paper, we propose a Systematic Literature Review (SLR) that classifies most influential approaches in the area of smart spaces according to a set of dimensions identified by answering a set of research questions. These dimensions allow to choose a specific method or approach according to available sensors, amount of labeled data, need for visual analysis, requirements in terms of enactment and decision-making on the environment. Additionally, the paper identifies a set of challenges to be addressed by future research in the field
Multi-Action Recognition via Stochastic Modelling of Optical Flow and Gradients
In this paper we propose a novel approach to multi-action recognition that
performs joint segmentation and classification. This approach models each
action using a Gaussian mixture using robust low-dimensional action features.
Segmentation is achieved by performing classification on overlapping temporal
windows, which are then merged to produce the final result. This approach is
considerably less complicated than previous methods which use dynamic
programming or computationally expensive hidden Markov models (HMMs). Initial
experiments on a stitched version of the KTH dataset show that the proposed
approach achieves an accuracy of 78.3%, outperforming a recent HMM-based
approach which obtained 71.2%
Short-segment heart sound classification using an ensemble of deep convolutional neural networks
This paper proposes a framework based on deep convolutional neural networks
(CNNs) for automatic heart sound classification using short-segments of
individual heart beats. We design a 1D-CNN that directly learns features from
raw heart-sound signals, and a 2D-CNN that takes inputs of two- dimensional
time-frequency feature maps based on Mel-frequency cepstral coefficients
(MFCC). We further develop a time-frequency CNN ensemble (TF-ECNN) combining
the 1D-CNN and 2D-CNN based on score-level fusion of the class probabilities.
On the large PhysioNet CinC challenge 2016 database, the proposed CNN models
outperformed traditional classifiers based on support vector machine and hidden
Markov models with various hand-crafted time- and frequency-domain features.
Best classification scores with 89.22% accuracy and 89.94% sensitivity were
achieved by the ECNN, and 91.55% specificity and 88.82% modified accuracy by
the 2D-CNN alone on the test set.Comment: 8 pages, 1 figure, conferenc
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