Adaptive Activity Monitoring with Uncertainty Quantification in Switching Gaussian Process Models
This work addresses power consumption issues in wearable healthcare monitoring, though it appears incremental as it builds on existing Gaussian process models with adaptive feature selection.
The paper tackles the challenge of power-efficient activity monitoring with wearable sensors by developing an adaptive framework that selects sensor groups to optimize the trade-off between energy consumption and prediction uncertainty, demonstrating effectiveness on the UCI Human Activity Recognition benchmark.
Emerging wearable sensors have enabled the unprecedented ability to continuously monitor human activities for healthcare purposes. However, with so many ambient sensors collecting different measurements, it becomes important not only to maintain good monitoring accuracy, but also low power consumption to ensure sustainable monitoring. This power-efficient sensing scheme can be achieved by deciding which group of sensors to use at a given time, requiring an accurate characterization of the trade-off between sensor energy usage and the uncertainty in ignoring certain sensor signals while monitoring. To address this challenge in the context of activity monitoring, we have designed an adaptive activity monitoring framework. We first propose a switching Gaussian process to model the observed sensor signals emitting from the underlying activity states. To efficiently compute the Gaussian process model likelihood and quantify the context prediction uncertainty, we propose a block circulant embedding technique and use Fast Fourier Transforms (FFT) for inference. By computing the Bayesian loss function tailored to switching Gaussian processes, an adaptive monitoring procedure is developed to select features from available sensors that optimize the trade-off between sensor power consumption and the prediction performance quantified by state prediction entropy. We demonstrate the effectiveness of our framework on the popular benchmark of UCI Human Activity Recognition using Smartphones.