Abstract

Certain patterns of eating behaviour during meal have been identified as risk factors for long-term abnormal eating development in healthy individuals and, eventually, can affect the body weight. To detect early signs of problematic eating behaviour, this paper proposes a novel method for building behaviour assessment models. The goal of the models is to predict whether the in-meal eating behaviour resembles patterns associated with obesity, eating disorders, or low-risk behaviours. The models are trained using meals recorded with a plate scale from a reference population and labels annotated by a domain expert. In addition, the domain expert assigned scores that characterise the degree of any exhibited abnormal patterns. To improve model effectiveness, we use the domain expert's scores to create training error regularisation weights that alter the importance of each training instance for its class during model training. The behaviour assessment models are based on the SVM algorithm and the fuzzy SVM algorithm for their instance-weighted variation. Experiments conducted on meals recorded from 120 individuals show that: (a) the proposed approach can produce effective models for eating behaviour classification (for individuals), or for ranking (for populations); and (b) the instance-weighted fuzzy SVM models achieve significant performance improvements, compared to the non-weighted, standard SVM models.

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