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Journal Article

Citation

Ricciuti M, Spinsante S, Gambi E. Sensors (Basel) 2018; 18(6): s18061754.

Affiliation

Dipartimento di Ingegneria dell'Informazione, Università Politecnica delle Marche via Brecce Bianche 12, 60131 Ancona, Italy. e.gambi@univpm.it.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2018, MDPI: Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute)

DOI

10.3390/s18061754

PMID

29844298

Abstract

Fall detection is one of the most investigated themes in the research on assistive solutions for aged people. In particular, a false-alarm-free discrimination between falls and non-falls is indispensable, especially to assist elderly people living alone. Current technological solutions designed to monitor several types of activities in indoor environments can guarantee absolute privacy to the people that decide to rely on them. Devices integrating RGB and depth cameras, such as the Microsoft Kinect, can ensure privacy and anonymity, since the depth information is considered to extract only meaningful information from video streams. In this paper, we propose an accurate fall detection method investigating the depth frames of the human body using a single device in a top-view configuration, with the subjects located under the device inside a room. Features extracted from depth frames train a classifier based on a binary support vector machine learning algorithm. The dataset includes 32 falls and 8 activities considered for comparison, for a total of 800 sequences performed by 20 adults. The system showed an accuracy of 98.6% and only one false positive.


Language: en

Keywords

ADLs; Kinect; depth frame; elderly people; fall detection; machine learning; privacy

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