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Human Posture Transition-Time Detection Based upon Inertial Measurement Unit and Long Short-Term Memory Neural Networks. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study focuses on detecting changes in human posture during various movements (standing, walking, sitting) using two deep-learning methods: Feedforward Neural Networks (FNN) and Long Short-Term Memory (LSTM).
  • Researchers introduced transition stages as key features to improve rapid detection based on human intention, utilizing an inertial measurement unit (IMU) for data collection.
  • Results showed LSTM performed better than FNN, with high accuracies (91% and 95%) at different sampling rates, and the trained model successfully detected posture changes across different subjects, highlighting its potential for real-world applications like digital twins and exoskeletons.

Article Abstract

As human-robot interaction becomes more prevalent in industrial and clinical settings, detecting changes in human posture has become increasingly crucial. While recognizing human actions has been extensively studied, the transition between different postures or movements has been largely overlooked. This study explores using two deep-learning methods, the linear Feedforward Neural Network (FNN) and Long Short-Term Memory (LSTM), to detect changes in human posture among three different movements: standing, walking, and sitting. To explore the possibility of rapid posture-change detection upon human intention, the authors introduced transition stages as distinct features for the identification. During the experiment, the subject wore an inertial measurement unit (IMU) on their right leg to measure joint parameters. The measurement data were used to train the two machine learning networks, and their performances were tested. This study also examined the effect of the sampling rates on the LSTM network. The results indicate that both methods achieved high detection accuracies. Still, the LSTM model outperformed the FNN in terms of speed and accuracy, achieving 91% and 95% accuracy for data sampled at 25 Hz and 100 Hz, respectively. Additionally, the network trained for one test subject was able to detect posture changes in other subjects, demonstrating the feasibility of personalized or generalized deep learning models for detecting human intentions. The accuracies for posture transition time and identification at a sampling rate of 100 Hz were 0.17 s and 94.44%, respectively. In summary, this study achieved some good outcomes and laid a crucial foundation for the engineering application of digital twins, exoskeletons, and human intention control.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10604330PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/biomimetics8060471DOI Listing

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