Inicio  /  Computation  /  Vol: 11 Par: 12 (2023)  /  Artículo
ARTÍCULO
TITULO

Effects of the Number of Classes and Pressure Map Resolution on Fine-Grained In-Bed Posture Classification

Luís Fonseca    
Fernando Ribeiro and José Metrôlho    

Resumen

In-bed posture classification has attracted considerable research interest and has significant potential to enhance healthcare applications. Recent works generally use approaches based on pressure maps, machine learning algorithms and focused mainly on finding solutions to obtain high accuracy in posture classification. Typically, these solutions use different datasets with varying numbers of sensors and classify the four main postures (supine, prone, left-facing, and right-facing) or, in some cases, include some variants of those main postures. Following this, this article has three main objectives: fine-grained detection of postures of bedridden people, identifying a large number of postures, including small variations?consideration of 28 different postures will help to better identify the actual position of the bedridden person with a higher accuracy. The number of different postures in this approach is considerably higher than the of those used in any other related work; analyze the impact of pressure map resolution on the posture classification accuracy, which has also not been addressed in other studies; and use the PoPu dataset, a dataset that includes pressure maps from 60 participants and 28 different postures. The dataset was analyzed using five distinct ML algorithms (k-nearest neighbors, linear support vector machines, decision tree, random forest, and multi-layer perceptron). This study?s findings show that the used algorithms achieve high accuracy in 4-posture classification (up to 99% in the case of MLP) using the PoPu dataset, with lower accuracies when attempting the finer-grained 28-posture classification approach (up to 68% in the case of random forest). The results indicate that using ML algorithms for finer-grained applications is possible to specify the patient?s exact position to some degree since the parent posture is still accurately classified. Furthermore, reducing the resolution of the pressure maps seems to affect the classifiers only slightly, which suggests that for applications that do not need finer-granularity, a lower resolution might suffice.

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