Soon, a smartwatch that can recognise your every move

Soon, a smartwatch that can recognise your every move
x
Highlights

The research will be published at the International Symposium on Wearable Computers in Hawaii, USA, in September.

A team of Briton scientists is developing a smartwatch that may detect and "understand" your every move, without being told what to look for.
Current smartwatches can recognise a limited number of particular activities, including yoga and running, but these are programmed in advance.

This new method enables the technology to discover activities as they happen, not just simply when exercising, but also when brushing your teeth or cutting vegetables.

The algorithm can even track sedentary activity, for instance whether you are lying or sitting down.

Dr Hristijan Gjoreski of the University of Sussex in Brighton said, "Current activity-recognition systems usually fail because they are limited to recognising a predefined set of activities, whereas of course human activities are not limited and change with time.

"Here we present a new machine-learning approach that detects new human activities as they happen in real time, and which outperforms competing approaches," Gjoreski added.

The new algorithm tracks ongoing activity, paying close attention to transitioning, as well as the activity itself. In the example above, it assumes that the walk will continue following the short pauses, and therefore holds the data while it waits.

Another researcher Dr Daniel Roggen from the University of Sussex stated that future smartwatches will be able to better analyse and understand activities by automatically discovering when we engage in some new type of activity.

This new method for activity discovery paints a far richer, more accurate, picture of daily human life.

As well as for fitness and lifestyle trackers, this can be used in healthcare scenarios and in fields such as consumer behaviour research.

The research will be published at the International Symposium on Wearable Computers in Hawaii, USA, in September.

Show Full Article
Print Article
Next Story
More Stories
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENTS