TY - JOUR
T1 - Improving Recognition of Overlapping Activities with Less Interclass Variations in Smart Homes through Clustering-Based Classification
AU - Sarwar, Muhammad Usman
AU - Gillani, Labiba Fahad
AU - Almadhor, Ahmad
AU - Shakya, Manoj
AU - Tariq, Usman
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 Muhammad Usman Sarwar et al.
PY - 2022
Y1 - 2022
N2 - The systems of sensing technology along with machine learning techniques provide a robust solution in a smart home due to which health monitoring, elderly care, and independent living take advantage. This study addresses the overlapping problem in activities performed by the smart home resident and improves the recognition performance of overlapping activities. The overlapping problem occurs due to less interclass variations (i.e., similar sensors used in more than one activity and the same location of performed activities). The proposed approach overlapping activity recognition using cluster-based classification (OAR-CbC) that makes a generic model for this problem is to use a soft partitioning technique to separate the homogeneous activities from nonhomogeneous activities on a coarse-grained level. Then, the activities within each cluster are balanced and the classifier is trained to correctly recognize the activities within each cluster independently on a fine-grained level. We examine four partitioning and classification techniques with the same hierarchy for a fair comparison. The OAR-CbC evaluates on smart home datasets Aruba and Milan using threefold and leave-one-day-out cross-validation. We used evaluation metrics: precision, recall, F score, accuracy, and confusion matrices to ensure the model's reliability. The OAR-CbC shows promising results on both datasets, notably boosting the recognition rate of all overlapping activities more than the state-of-the-art studies.
AB - The systems of sensing technology along with machine learning techniques provide a robust solution in a smart home due to which health monitoring, elderly care, and independent living take advantage. This study addresses the overlapping problem in activities performed by the smart home resident and improves the recognition performance of overlapping activities. The overlapping problem occurs due to less interclass variations (i.e., similar sensors used in more than one activity and the same location of performed activities). The proposed approach overlapping activity recognition using cluster-based classification (OAR-CbC) that makes a generic model for this problem is to use a soft partitioning technique to separate the homogeneous activities from nonhomogeneous activities on a coarse-grained level. Then, the activities within each cluster are balanced and the classifier is trained to correctly recognize the activities within each cluster independently on a fine-grained level. We examine four partitioning and classification techniques with the same hierarchy for a fair comparison. The OAR-CbC evaluates on smart home datasets Aruba and Milan using threefold and leave-one-day-out cross-validation. We used evaluation metrics: precision, recall, F score, accuracy, and confusion matrices to ensure the model's reliability. The OAR-CbC shows promising results on both datasets, notably boosting the recognition rate of all overlapping activities more than the state-of-the-art studies.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85131850974&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1155/2022/8303856
DO - 10.1155/2022/8303856
M3 - Article
C2 - 35694589
AN - SCOPUS:85131850974
SN - 1687-5265
VL - 2022
JO - Computational Intelligence and Neuroscience
JF - Computational Intelligence and Neuroscience
M1 - 8303856
ER -