Abstract

The aging population has resulted in interest in remote monitoring of elderly individuals’ health and well being. This paper describes a simple unsupervised monitoring system that can automatically detect if an elderly individual’s pattern of presence deviates substantially from the recent past. The proposed system uses a small set of low-cost motion sensors and analyzes the produced data to establish an individual’s typical presence pattern. Then, the algorithm uses a distance function to determine whether the individual’s observed presence for each day significantly deviates from their typical pattern. Empirically, the algorithm is validated on both synthetic data and data collected by installing our system in the residences of three older individuals. In the real-world setting, the system detected, respectively, five, four, and one deviating days in the three locations. The deviating days detected by the system could result from a health issue that requires attention. The information from the system can aid caregivers in assessing the subject’s health status and allows for a targeted intervention. Although the system can be refined, we show that otherwise hidden but relevant events (e.g., fall incident and irregular sleep patterns) are detected and reported to the caregiver.

Highlights

  • The aging population has motivated interest in prolonging people’s ability to live independently

  • This paper describes a system that analyzes remote sensing data collected by nonintrusive, passive infrared motion detection sensors (PIR) to identify days that show locational behavior which deviates significantly from recent history

  • Any commercially available PIR sensor with ZigBee could be used for the monitor system

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Summary

Introduction

The aging population has motivated interest in prolonging people’s ability to live independently. Caregivers evaluate an elderly person’s independence via a questionnaire This is a time-consuming process and the results do not always give an objective picture of the person’s status as answers can be interpreted subjectively by the caregiver, or the subject’s feedback can be inaccurate [2]. It relies on a person’s ability and willingness to give an accurate overview of his health status and report important events such as illnesses, fall incidents, and changing sleep patterns. Elderly individuals often forget to mention these facts during interviews [2]

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