Keyword search (4,163 papers available)

"wearable sensor data" Keyword-tagged Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 On the Impact of Biceps Muscle Fatigue in Human Activity Recognition. Elshafei M, Costa DE, Shihab E 33557239
ENCS
2 Towards Detecting Biceps Muscle Fatigue in Gym Activity Using Wearables. Elshafei M, Shihab E 33498702
ENCS

 

Title:On the Impact of Biceps Muscle Fatigue in Human Activity Recognition.
Authors:Elshafei MCosta DEShihab E
Link:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33557239
DOI:10.3390/s21041070
Publication:Sensors (Basel, Switzerland)
Keywords:human activity recognitionmachine learningwearable sensor datawearable sensors
PMID:33557239 Category:Sensors (Basel) Date Added:2021-02-10
Dept Affiliation: ENCS
1 Department of Computer Science and Software Engineering, Concordia University, Montreal, QC H3G 1M8, Canada.

Description:

On the Impact of Biceps Muscle Fatigue in Human Activity Recognition.

Sensors (Basel). 2021 Feb 04; 21(4):

Authors: Elshafei M, Costa DE, Shihab E

Abstract

Nowadays, Human Activity Recognition (HAR) systems, which use wearables and smart systems, are a part of our daily life. Despite the abundance of literature in the area, little is known about the impact of muscle fatigue on these systems' performance. In this work, we use the biceps concentration curls exercise as an example of a HAR activity to observe the impact of fatigue impact on such systems. Our dataset consists of 3000 biceps concentration curls performed and collected from 20 volunteers aged between 20-35. Our findings indicate that fatigue often occurs in later sets of an exercise and extends the completion time of later sets by up to 31% and decreases muscular endurance by 4.1%. Another finding shows that changes in data patterns are often occurring during fatigue presence, causing seven features to become statistically insignificant. Further findings indicate that fatigue can cause a substantial decrease in performance in both subject-specific and cross-subject models. Finally, we observed that a Feedforward Neural Network (FNN) showed the best performance in both cross-subject and subject-specific models in all our evaluations.

PMID: 33557239 [PubMed - in process]





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