Author(s): Manouchehri N; Bouguila N;
Human activity recognition (HAR) has become an interesting topic in healthcare. This application is important in various domains, such as health monitoring, supporting elders, and disease diagnosis. Considering the increasing improvements in smart devices, ...
Article GUID: 36772428
Author(s): Afzali Arani MS; Costa DE; Shihab E;
Inertial sensors are widely used in the field of human activity recognition (HAR), since this source of information is the most informative time series among non-visual datasets. HAR researchers are actively exploring other approaches and different sources ...
Article GUID: 34770303
Author(s): Elshafei M, Costa DE, Shihab E
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. I ...
Article GUID: 33557239
Author(s): Elshafei M, Shihab E
Fatigue is a naturally occurring phenomenon during human activities, but it poses a bigger risk for injuries during physically demanding activities, such as gym activities and athletics. Several studies show that bicep muscle fatigue can lead to various inj ...
Article GUID: 33498702
Author(s): Khannouz M; Glatard T;
This paper evaluates data stream classifiers from the perspective of connected devices, focusing on the use case of Human Activity Recognition. We measure both the classification performance and resource consumption (runtime, memory, and power) of five usua ...
Article GUID: 33202905
Author(s): Dehghani A, Sarbishei O, Glatard T, Shihab E
Sensors (Basel). 2019 Nov 18;19(22): Authors: Dehghani A, Sarbishei O, Glatard T, Shihab E
Article GUID: 31752158
- Page 1 / 1 -