Title :
Accelerometer-based fall detection for smartphones
Author :
Aguiar, Braulio ; Rocha, T. ; Silva, Jaime ; Sousa, Ivo
Author_Institution :
Rua Alfredo Allen, Fraunhofer Portugal AICOS, Porto, Portugal
Abstract :
Falls are considered the main cause of fear and loss of independence among the elderly population and are also a major cause of morbidity, disability and health care utilization. In the majority of fall events external support is imperative in order to avoid major consequences. Therefore, the ability to automatically detect these fall events could help reducing the response time and significantly improve the prognosis of fall victims. This paper presents a unobtrusive smartphone based fall detection system that uses a combination of information derived from machine learning classification applied in a state machine algorithm. The data from the smartphone built-in accelerometer is continuously screened when the phone is in the user´s belt or pocket. Upon the detection of a fall event, the user location is tracked and SMS and email notifications are sent to a set of contacts. The accuracy of the fall detection algorithm here proposed is near 97.5% for both the pocket and belt usage. In conclusion, the proposed solution can reliably detect fall events without disturbing the users with excessive false alarms, presenting also the advantage of not changing the user´s routines, since no additional external sensors are required.
Keywords :
accelerometers; accidents; biomedical telemetry; body sensor networks; electronic mail; electronic messaging; geriatrics; health care; learning (artificial intelligence); medical signal detection; medical signal processing; object tracking; signal classification; smart phones; telemedicine; SMS notifications; accelerometer-based fall detection; automatic fall event detection; contact notifications; continuous data screening; elderly population disability; elderly population morbidity; email notifications; external sensor requirement; fall detection algorithm accuracy; fall victim prognosis; false alarms; health care utilization; machine learning classification; response time reduction; smartphone built-in accelerometer; smartphones; state machine algorithm; unobtrusive smartphone based fall detection system; user belt; user location tracking; user pocket; user routines; Acceleration; Accelerometers; Accuracy; Belts; Sensitivity; Sensors; Smart phones; ADL; Accelerometer; Ageing; Classification Algorithms; Fall Classification; Fall Detection; Inertial Sensors; Smartphone;
Conference_Titel :
Medical Measurements and Applications (MeMeA), 2014 IEEE International Symposium on
Conference_Location :
Lisboa
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4799-2920-7
DOI :
10.1109/MeMeA.2014.6860110