Organisation: |
University Grenoble Alpes
CONVECS project-team, Inria Grenoble - Rhône-Alpes and LIG (FRANCE) |
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Method: |
MCL
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Tools used: |
CADP (Construction and Analysis of Distributed Processes)
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Domain: |
Smart Homes.
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Period: |
2017
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Size: |
1,473,011 events (sensor measurements).
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Description: |
Activity recognition in smart environments is a necessary step for
the development of innovative services. In the health-care domain,
recognizing activities of daily living (ADL) enables health status
monitoring, functional assessments and smart assistance. Despite the
broad efforts made in recent years to improve activity recognition,
ADL recognition (e.g., cooking, washing dishes, showering) is still
not commercially available as is physical activity recognition
(e.g., running, cycling).
The first contribution of this study is a rich real-life dataset of daily living activities. This set, named ContextAct@A4H, includes sensor raw data reflecting the context as well as standard daily living annotated activities. Context information can help study how contextual changes affect user behavior and preferences. The dataset was collected using the experimental platform Amiqual4Home, which comprises an apartment equipped with 219 sensors and actuators. For collecting the dataset, a 28 years old woman lived in the apartment during four weeks. The activity monitoring was non-intrusive, using ambient sensors only (no wearable sensors nor cameras). Several context variables were measured: temperature, CO2, noise, humidity, presence and music information, weather information, etc. Appliance and object usage were measured through electric/water consumption sensors, contact sensors and state change sensors (for lamps, curtains and switches). The second contribution is the automatic detection of activities by analysing the sensor raw data present in the dataset using model checking techniques. The ContextAct@A4H dataset was seen as a log of events, each one containing the occurrence date (including day time), the sensor id, and the sensor value. This log was translated into the SEQ textual format of CADP, accepted as input by the SEQ.OPEN tool. To give simple meanings to complex log events, 125 macro-definitions were written in MCL, and were used subsequently in temporal logic formulas to detect activities in the log. Five different activities were recognized using the EVALUATOR model checker: sleep (start), toilet use (end), cooking (start), taking a shower (end), and washing dishes (start). The average f-measure (a weighted average of the precision and recall) obtained was 0.72, whereas the highest f-measure previously reported in the literature was 0.61. |
Conclusions: |
Using temporal logic allows specifying activities as complex events
of object usage, which can be described at different granularities.
It also expresses temporal order between events, thus palliating a
limitation of ontology based activity recognition. Each activity was
described as a temporal logic property that is checked repeatedly on
the log of sensor measurements until all occurrences of the activity
have been found. One of the main advantages of this approach over other
techniques is the ability to recognize start and end of the activity,
thus not requiring to segment sensor data.
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Publications: |
[Lago-Lang-Roncancio-et-al-17]
P. Lago, F. Lang, C. Roncancio, C. Jiménez-Guarín,
R. Mateescu, and N. Bonnefond.
The ContextAct@A4H Real-Life Dataset of Daily-Living Activities
Activity Recognition using Model Checking.
Proceedings of the 10th International and Interdisciplinary Conference
on Modeling and Using Context (CONTEXT'2017), Paris, France, LNCS vol.
10257, pages 175-188. Springer Verlag, June 2017.
Available on-line at: https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-57837-8_14 and from the CADP Web site in PDF or PostScript |
Contact: | Claudia Roncancio Grenoble INP - ENSIMAG SIGMA team Laboratoire d'Informatique de Grenoble Batiment C - Bureau 223 220, rue de la Chimie 38400 Saint Martin d'Hères France Tel: +33 (0)4 76 63 55 71 Email: [email protected] |
Further remarks: | This case study, amongst others, is described on the CADP Web site: http://cadp.inria.fr/case-studies |