Abstract

This study aimed to assess the motion accuracy of Baduanjin and recognise the motions of Baduanjin based on sequence-based methods. Motion data of Baduanjin were measured by the inertial sensor measurement system (IMU). Fifty-four participants were recruited to capture motion data. Based on the motion data, various sequence-based methods, namely dynamic time warping (DTW) combined with classifiers, hidden Markov model (HMM), and recurrent neural networks (RNNs), were applied to assess motion accuracy and recognise the motions of Baduanjin. To assess motion accuracy, the scores for motion accuracies from teachers were used as the standard to train the models on the different sequence-based methods. The effectiveness of Baduanjin motion recognition with different sequence-based methods was verified. Among the methods, DTW + k-NN had the highest average accuracy (83.03%) and shortest average processing time (3.810 s) during assessing. In terms of motion reorganisation, three methods (DTW + k-NN, DTW + SVM, and HMM) had the highest accuracies (over 99%), which were not significantly different from each other. However, the processing time of DTW + k-NN was the shortest (3.823 s) compared to the other two methods. The results show that the motions of Baduanjin could be recognised, and the accuracy can be assessed through an appropriate sequence-based method with the motion data captured by IMU.

Highlights

  • Traditional Chinese sports are an essential part of physical education (PE) in universities in China

  • Traditional Chinese sports have been incorporated into university PE curriculums, there have been some problems in implementation

  • The results show that the processing time of dynamic time warping (DTW) + k-nearest neighbour (k-NN) was the shortest (3.810 s)

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Summary

Introduction

Traditional Chinese sports are an essential part of physical education (PE) in universities in China. The official document issued by the Ministry of Education requires that the PE curriculum of all universities in China include traditional Chinese sports [1]. An official report in 2012 showed that 76.7% of universities in China had chosen Chinese martial arts as part of their PE curriculum. According to the latest official report [3], the number of students in universities in China hit a record high of 40.02 million in 2019. Of this number, 30.31 million were undergraduates, and the average number of students per university was 15,176.

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