Affiliation:
1. Deggendorf Institute of Technology; Technology Campus Grafenau, 94481 Grafenau, Germany
Abstract
Human activity event recognition (HAER) within a residence is a topic of significant interest in the field of ambient assisted living (AAL). Commonly, various sensors are installed within a residence to enable the monitoring of people. This work presents a new approach for HAER within a residence by (re-)using measurements from commercial smart water meters. Our approach is based on the assumption that changes in water flow within a residence, specifically the transition from no flow to flow above a certain threshold, indicate human activity. Using a separate, labeled evaluation data set from three households that was collected under controlled/laboratory-like conditions, we assess the performance of our HAER method. Our results showed that the approach has a high precision (0.86) and recall (1.00). Within this work, we further recorded a new open data set of water consumption data in 17 German households with a median sample rate of 0.083¯ Hz to demonstrate that water flow data are sufficient to detect activity events within a regular daily routine. Overall, this article demonstrates that smart water meter data can be effectively used for HAER within a residence.
Funder
Bavarian State Ministry of Family Affairs, Labor, and Social Affairs
Subject
Control and Optimization,Computer Networks and Communications,Instrumentation
Reference33 articles.
1. Ann, O.C., and Theng, L.B. (2014, January 28–30). Human activity recognition: A review. Proceedings of the 2014 IEEE International Conference on Control System, Computing and Engineering (ICCSCE 2014), Penang, Malaysia.
2. Hussain, Z., Sheng, M., and Zhang, W.E. (2019). Different Approaches for Human Activity Recognition: A Survey. arXiv.
3. Behavior analysis for elderly care using a network of low-resolution visual sensors;Eldib;J. Electron. Imaging,2016
4. Wilhelm, S. (2021). Advances in Intelligent Systems and Computing, Springer International Publishing.
5. Floeck, M., and Litz, L. (2009, January 16–18). Inactivity patterns and alarm generation in senior citizens’ houses. Proceedings of the 2009 European Control Conference (ECC), Shangai, China.