Abstract Background Mobile health monitoring using wearable sensors is a growing area of interest. As the world’s population ages and locomotor capabilities decrease, the ability to report on a person’s mobility activities outside a hospital setting becomes a valuable tool for clinical decision-making and evaluating healthcare interventions. Smartphones are omnipresent in society and offer convenient and suitable sensors for mobility monitoring applications. To enhance our understanding of human activity recognition (HAR) system performance for able-bodied and populations with gait deviations, this research evaluated a custom smartphone-based HAR classifier on fifteen able-bodied participants a...
Smartphones devices, due to its complex sensory capability and comparable processing power, have pro...
The aim of activity recognition is to determine the physical action being performed by one or more u...
of a smartphone human activity recognition application with able-bodied and stroke participant
<div><p>Human activity recognition (HAR), using wearable sensors, is a growing area with the potenti...
Human activity recognition (HAR), using wearable sensors, is a growing area with the potential to pr...
Modern smartphones contain multiple sensors and long lasting batteries, making them ideal platforms ...
AbstractRecognizing human activities and monitoring population behavior are fundamental needs of our...
Using mobile phones for Human Activities Recognition (HAR) is very helpful in providing a personaliz...
In this paper, the authors describe a method of accurately detecting human activity using a smartpho...
Human activity recognition (HAR) using smartphones provides significant healthcare guidance for tele...
This paper addresses approaches to Human Activity Recognition (HAR) with the aim of monitoring the p...
Human physical motion activity identification has many potential applications in various fields, suc...
Stroke is a leading cause of disability worldwide, with approximately one third of people left with ...
Cursos e Congresos, C-155[Abstract] Human activity recognition (HAR) has garnered significant scient...
Human Activity Recognition (HAR) is an emerging research field with the aim to identify the actions ...
Smartphones devices, due to its complex sensory capability and comparable processing power, have pro...
The aim of activity recognition is to determine the physical action being performed by one or more u...
of a smartphone human activity recognition application with able-bodied and stroke participant
<div><p>Human activity recognition (HAR), using wearable sensors, is a growing area with the potenti...
Human activity recognition (HAR), using wearable sensors, is a growing area with the potential to pr...
Modern smartphones contain multiple sensors and long lasting batteries, making them ideal platforms ...
AbstractRecognizing human activities and monitoring population behavior are fundamental needs of our...
Using mobile phones for Human Activities Recognition (HAR) is very helpful in providing a personaliz...
In this paper, the authors describe a method of accurately detecting human activity using a smartpho...
Human activity recognition (HAR) using smartphones provides significant healthcare guidance for tele...
This paper addresses approaches to Human Activity Recognition (HAR) with the aim of monitoring the p...
Human physical motion activity identification has many potential applications in various fields, suc...
Stroke is a leading cause of disability worldwide, with approximately one third of people left with ...
Cursos e Congresos, C-155[Abstract] Human activity recognition (HAR) has garnered significant scient...
Human Activity Recognition (HAR) is an emerging research field with the aim to identify the actions ...
Smartphones devices, due to its complex sensory capability and comparable processing power, have pro...
The aim of activity recognition is to determine the physical action being performed by one or more u...
of a smartphone human activity recognition application with able-bodied and stroke participant