Transfer Learning Approach for Human Activity Recognition Based on Continuous Wavelet Transform

Olena Pavliuk, Myroslav Mishchuk, Christine Strauss

Publications: Contribution to journalArticlePeer Reviewed

Abstract

Over the last few years, human activity recognition (HAR) has drawn increasing interest from the scientific community. This attention is mainly attributable to the proliferation of wearable sensors and the expanding role of HAR in such fields as healthcare, sports, and human activity monitoring. Convolutional neural networks (CNN) are becoming a popular approach for addressing HAR problems. However, this method requires extensive training datasets to perform adequately on new data. This paper proposes a novel deep learning model pre-trained on scalograms generated using the continuous wavelet transform (CWT). Nine popular CNN architectures and different CWT configurations were considered to select the best performing combination, resulting in the training and evaluation of more than 300 deep learning models. On the source KU-HAR dataset, the selected model achieved classification accuracy and an F1 score of 97.48% and 97.52%, respectively, which outperformed contemporary state-of-the-art works where this dataset was employed. On the target UCI-HAPT dataset, the proposed model resulted in a maximum accuracy and F1-score increase of 0.21% and 0.33%, respectively, on the whole UCI-HAPT dataset and of 2.82% and 2.89%, respectively, on the UCI-HAPT subset. It was concluded that the usage of the proposed model, particularly with frozen layers, results in improved performance, faster training, and smoother gradient descent on small HAR datasets. However, the use of the pre-trained model on sufficiently large datasets may lead to negative transfer and accuracy degradation.
Original languageEnglish
Article number77
JournalAlgorithms
Volume16
Issue number2
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Feb 2023

Austrian Fields of Science 2012

  • 206001 Biomedical engineering

Keywords

  • biomedical signal processing
  • continuous wavelet transform
  • convolutional neural networks
  • human activity recognition
  • transfer learning

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