Currently available technological solutions do not allow to reliably detect falls in the elderly, due to still-open issues on both sensing and processing sides. In fact, the most promising sensing approaches raise concerns for privacy issues (e.g., vision-based approaches) or low acceptability rate (e.g., wearable-based approaches); whereas on the processing side, commonly used methodologies are based on supervised techniques trained with both positive (falls) and negative (non-fall) samples, both simulated by healthy young subjects. As a result of such a training protocol, fall detectors inevitably exhibit lower performance when used in real-life conditions, in which monitored subjects are older adults. In order to address the problem of fall detection under real-life conditions, this study investigates privacy-preserving unobtrusive sensing technologies together with an unsupervised methodology trained exclusively on daily activity (non-fall) data from the monitored elderly subject. Preliminary results are very encouraging, showing the effectiveness to achieve a good detection performance and, most importantly, which is more reproducible in real-life scenarios.

Radar sensing technology for fall detection under near real-life conditions

Diraco Giovanni;Leone Alessandro;Siciliano Pietro
2016

Abstract

Currently available technological solutions do not allow to reliably detect falls in the elderly, due to still-open issues on both sensing and processing sides. In fact, the most promising sensing approaches raise concerns for privacy issues (e.g., vision-based approaches) or low acceptability rate (e.g., wearable-based approaches); whereas on the processing side, commonly used methodologies are based on supervised techniques trained with both positive (falls) and negative (non-fall) samples, both simulated by healthy young subjects. As a result of such a training protocol, fall detectors inevitably exhibit lower performance when used in real-life conditions, in which monitored subjects are older adults. In order to address the problem of fall detection under real-life conditions, this study investigates privacy-preserving unobtrusive sensing technologies together with an unsupervised methodology trained exclusively on daily activity (non-fall) data from the monitored elderly subject. Preliminary results are very encouraging, showing the effectiveness to achieve a good detection performance and, most importantly, which is more reproducible in real-life scenarios.
2016
Istituto per la Microelettronica e Microsistemi - IMM
Inglese
Technologies for Active and Assisted Living (TechAAL 2016), 2nd IET International Conference on
2016
http://www.scopus.com/record/display.url?eid=2-s2.0-85007442823&origin=inward
Sì, ma tipo non specificato
24-25/10/2016
Fall detection
Time-of-flight range camera
Ultra-wideband radar
Unobtrusive sensing
Unsupervised machine learning
3
none
Diraco, Giovanni; Leone, Alessandro; Siciliano, Pietro
273
info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject
04 Contributo in convegno::04.01 Contributo in Atti di convegno
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/333045
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