Machine Learning on Prediction of Relative Physical Activity Intensity Using Medical Radar Sensor and 3D Accelerometer

Author:

Biró Attila123ORCID,Szilágyi Sándor Miklós2ORCID,Szilágyi László45ORCID,Martín-Martín Jaime36ORCID,Cuesta-Vargas Antonio Ignacio137ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Physiotherapy, University of Malaga, 29071 Malaga, Spain

2. Department of Electrical Engineering and Information Technology, George Emil Palade University of Medicine, Pharmacy, Science, and Technology of Targu Mures, Str. Nicolae Iorga, Nr. 1, 540088 Targu Mures, Romania

3. Biomedical Research Institute of Malaga (IBIMA), 29590 Malaga, Spain

4. Computational Intelligence Research Group, Sapientia Hungarian University of Transylvania, 540485 Targu Mures, Romania

5. Physiological Controls Research Center, Óbuda University, 1034 Budapest, Hungary

6. Legal and Forensic Medicine Area, Department of Human Anatomy, Legal Medicine and History of Science, Faculty of Medicine, University of Malaga, 29071 Malaga, Spain

7. Faculty of Health Science, School of Clinical Science, Queensland University Technology, Brisbane 4000, Australia

Abstract

Background: One of the most critical topics in sports safety today is the reduction in injury risks through controlled fatigue using non-invasive athlete monitoring. Due to the risk of injuries, it is prohibited to use accelerometer-based smart trackers, activity measurement bracelets, and smart watches for recording health parameters during performance sports activities. This study analyzes the synergy feasibility of medical radar sensors and tri-axial acceleration sensor data to predict physical activity key performance indexes in performance sports by using machine learning (ML). The novelty of this method is that it uses a 24 GHz Doppler radar sensor to detect vital signs such as the heartbeat and breathing without touching the person and to predict the intensity of physical activity, combined with the acceleration data from 3D accelerometers. Methods: This study is based on the data collected from professional athletes and freely available datasets created for research purposes. A combination of sensor data management was used: a medical radar sensor with no-contact remote sensing to measure the heart rate (HR) and 3D acceleration to measure the velocity of the activity. Various advanced ML methods and models were employed on the top of sensors to analyze the vital parameters and predict the health activity key performance indexes. three-axial acceleration, heart rate data, age, as well as activity level variances. Results: The ML models recognized the physical activity intensity and estimated the energy expenditure on a realistic level. Leave-one-out (LOO) cross-validation (CV), as well as out-of-sample testing (OST) methods, have been used to evaluate the level of accuracy in activity intensity prediction. The energy expenditure prediction with three-axial accelerometer sensors by using linear regression provided 97–99% accuracy on selected sports (cycling, running, and soccer). The ML-based RPE results using medical radar sensors on a time-series heart rate (HR) dataset varied between 90 and 96% accuracy. The expected level of accuracy was examined with different models. The average accuracy for all the models (RPE and METs) and setups was higher than 90%. Conclusions: The ML models that classify the rating of the perceived exertion and the metabolic equivalent of tasks perform consistently.

Funder

ITware, Hungary

University of Malaga

Consolidator Excellence Researcher Program of Óbuda University, Budapest, Hungary

Sapientia Institute for Research Programs, Romania

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Electrical and Electronic Engineering,Biochemistry,Instrumentation,Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics,Analytical Chemistry

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1. Radar-Based Exercise Energy Expenditure Estimation with Deep Learning;2024 IEEE Symposium on Wireless Technology & Applications (ISWTA);2024-07-20

2. Predictive Analytics for Monitoring and Classifying Physical Activity Intensity Using Smartphone Sensors;2024 2nd International Conference on Sustainable Computing and Smart Systems (ICSCSS);2024-07-10

3. EXPLORING NOVEL APPROACHES FOR QUANTIFYING LEVELS OF PHYSICAL ACTIVITY;Kinesiologia Slovenica;2024-04-30

4. Machine Learning‐Enhanced Triboelectric Sensing Application;Advanced Materials Technologies;2024-02-06

5. Circuit Design, Realization, and Test of a Bluetooth Low Energy Wireless Sensor With On-Board Computation for Remote Healthcare Monitoring;IEEE Journal of Radio Frequency Identification;2024

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