Smart Sensing Based Approaches for Supporting Independent Living of the Elderly

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dc.contributor.author Chaudhary, Atul
dc.date.accessioned 2022-11-24T06:05:02Z
dc.date.available 2022-11-24T06:05:02Z
dc.date.issued 2021
dc.identifier.uri http://localhost:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/1899
dc.description Acc.No:-1009 en_US
dc.description.abstract The aging of the world population is becoming more and more serious. It has created an increasing need for new and innovative assistive technologies to improve older adults’ lives while reducing the burden placed on the healthcare system and caregivers. Older adults are at significant risk of having multiple chronic diseases and associated functional impairment. For many older adults, these concerns are further compounded by the presence of cognitive impairment such as dementia. Dementia is considered to be one of the greatest challenges for health and social care in the 21st century. A significant challenge in dementia is achieving an accurate and timely diagnosis. If the patient can have proper medical treatment at an early stage, then the dementia growth can be delayed by months to years. Moreover, because of the ongoing novel coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic, healthcare experts and doctors advised older adults to live in isolation since they have a high risk of contracting the virus. Individuals need to complete Activities of Daily Living (ADL) to function independently at home. ADL consists of necessary self-care activities such as eating, cooking, drinking, dressing, tak ing medication, and sleeping. Many older adults with mental illnesses and chronic diseases have difficulties in performing ADL tasks. Meanwhile, older adults prefer to live in their own homes for as long as possible rather than move to aged care facilities. Consequently, smart homes have become an active research domain, especially in providing healthcare and assistive services. Smart homes employ various sensors, actuators, and computational elements to help xx Preface the inhabitants in many possible situations and assist them with daily activities. They involve many technologies, including ADL recognition, future ADL prediction, early diagnosis of illness, and prompting system. Such technologies focus on augmenting current health care services to help older adults live a quality of independent life in their places and extend the time that an older adult can live self-sufficiently. The existing literature considered different sensor modalities to gather human activities information for developing assistive technologies, including environmental sensors, wearable sensors, and video sensors. However, video sensors are not practical due to privacy issues, and the accuracy of wearable sensors relies upon the body attachment position. Next, most of the existing literature on ADL recognition considers class balanced data, while the real-life datasets are significantly imbalanced. Such imbalanced training data can result in a biased system optimized to favor the majority classes while failing to recognize the minority classes. In addition to these, prior works either use hand-crafted features or high-level features to recognize the ADL. Moreover, until now, research on ADL recognition has mostly centered around offline recognition. The un predictability of future events and the requirement of dealing with the un-segmented activity streams make online ADL recognition very challenging. In this thesis, we investigate different smart sensing based approaches for supporting the independent living of the elderly. We primarily focus on environmental or external sensors for unobtrusive monitoring such as infrared motion, magnetic door, light, or temperature sensors. These sensors are embedded in the environment or objects of daily living. Their non-intrusive characteristics make them suitable for assistive technologies where user acceptance and privacy are needed. The first contribution of this thesis is to detect dementia at an early stage using unobtrusive sensor data. As a solution, this work proposes an early dementia detection system using older adults’ travel pattern classification. We use the environmental sensor signals for sensing the movements of older adults. The system segments the movements into travel episodes and classifies Preface xxi them using a recurrent neural network. The second contribution of this thesis is to predict the ADL older adults will perform ahead of time. We propose a multi-task activity prediction system that jointly predicts future activities’ labels, locations, and starting times. In this work, the observed sequence of previous activities characterizes future activities. The next contribution of this thesis is to recognize ADL in real time through supervised learning. This work proposes a system that unobtrusively recognizes ADL in real-time from streaming sensor data addressing the long-tailed class distribution problem. The proposed system effectively combines deep learned features with hand-crafted features to recognize ADL better. In the last contribution, we address the problem of recognizing ADL through transfer learning that can leverage labeled data from a different smart home. As a solution, this work proposes a transfer network for ADL recognition through unsupervised domain adaptation between smart homes with different spatial layouts and sensor deployment. en_US
dc.language.iso en_US en_US
dc.publisher IIT (BHU), Varanasi en_US
dc.subject Smart Sensing en_US
dc.subject Elderly en_US
dc.subject Independent Living en_US
dc.title Smart Sensing Based Approaches for Supporting Independent Living of the Elderly en_US
dc.type Thesis en_US


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