Abstract

Human activity recognition has been widely used to monitor users during physical activities. By embedding a pre-trained model into wearable devices with an inertial measurement unit, it is possible to identify the activity being executed, count steps and activity duration time, and even predict when the user should hydrate himself. Despite these interesting applications, these approaches are limited by a set of pre-trained activities, making them unable to learn new human activities. In this paper, we introduce a novel approach for generating runtime models to give the users feedback that helps them to correctly perform repetitive physical activities. To perform a distributed analysis, the methodology focuses on applying the proposed method to each specific body segment. The method adopts the Restricted Boltzmann Machine to learn the patterns of repetitive physical activities and, at the same time, provides suggestions for adjustments if the repetition is not consistent with the model. The learning and the suggestions are both based on inertial measurement data mainly considering movement acceleration and amplitude. The results show that by applying the model’s suggestions to the evaluation data, the adjusted output was up to 3.68x more similar to the expected movement than the original data.

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