Abstract

Motion trajectories contain rich information about human activities. We propose to use a 2-D LIDAR to perform multiple people activity recognition simultaneously by classifying their trajectories. We clustered raw LIDAR data and classified the clusters into human and nonhuman classes in order to recognize humans in a scenario. For the clusters of humans, we implemented the Kalman filter to track their trajectories which are further segmented and labeled with corresponding activities. We introduced spatial transformation and Gaussian noise for trajectory augmentation in order to overcome the problem of unbalanced classes and boost the performance of human activity recognition (HAR). Finally, we built two neural networks, including a long short-term memory (LSTM) network and a temporal convolutional network (TCN) to classify trajectory samples into 15 activity classes collected from a kitchen. The proposed TCN achieved the best result of 99.49% in overall accuracy. In comparison, the TCN is slightly superior to the LSTM network. Both the TCN and the LSTM network outperform the hidden Markov model (HMM), dynamic time warping (DTW), and support vector machine (SVM) with a wide margin. Our approach achieves a higher activity recognition accuracy than the related work.

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