Title
A Behaviour Monitoring System (BMS) for Ambient Assisted Living.
Abstract
Unusual changes in the regular daily mobility routine of an elderly person at home can be an indicator or early symptom of developing health problems. Sensor technology can be utilised to complement the traditional healthcare systems to gain a more detailed view of the daily mobility of a person at home when performing everyday tasks. We hypothesise that data collected from low-cost sensors such as presence and occupancy sensors can be analysed to provide insights on the daily mobility habits of the elderly living alone at home and to detect routine changes. We validate this hypothesis by designing a system that automatically learns the daily room-to-room transitions and permanence habits in each room at each time of the day and generates alarm notifications when deviations are detected. We present an algorithm to process the sensors' data streams and compute sensor-driven features that describe the daily mobility routine of the elderly as part of the developed Behaviour Monitoring System (BMS). We are able to achieve low detection delay with confirmation time that is high enough to convey the detection of a set of common abnormal situations. We illustrate and evaluate BMS with synthetic data, generated by a developed data generator that was designed to mimic different user's mobility profiles at home, and also with a real-life dataset collected from prior research work. Results indicate BMS detects several mobility changes that can be symptoms of common health problems. The proposed system is a useful approach for learning the mobility habits at the home environment, with the potential to detect behaviour changes that occur due to health problems, and therefore, motivating progress toward behaviour monitoring and elder's care.
Year
DOI
Venue
2017
10.3390/s17091946
SENSORS
Keywords
Field
DocType
in-house monitoring of older adults,Ambient Assisted Living,learning mobility routine at home,detecting abnormal behaviour
Data stream mining,Everyday tasks,Monitoring system,Data generator,ALARM,Simulation,Electronic engineering,Synthetic data,Human–computer interaction,Occupancy,Engineering,Healthcare system
Journal
Volume
Issue
ISSN
17
9.0
1424-8220
Citations 
PageRank 
References 
2
0.37
32
Authors
2
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Samih Eisa120.37
Adriano Moreira223459.85