淡江大學機構典藏:Item 987654321/126327
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    Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://tkuir.lib.tku.edu.tw/dspace/handle/987654321/126327


    Title: Fusion of kinematic and physiological sensors for hand gesture recognition
    Authors: Wang, Aiguo;Liu, Huancheng;Zheng, Chundi;Chen, Huihui;Chang, Chih-Yung
    Keywords: Gesture recognition;Electromyography;Accelerometer;Feature extraction;Cross-subject
    Date: 2024-01-29
    Issue Date: 2024-10-02 12:05:43 (UTC+8)
    Abstract: The uncertainty of hand gestures, the variability of gestures across subjects, and the high cost of collecting a large amount of annotated data lead to a great challenge to the robust recognition of gestures, and thus it remains quite crucial to capture the informative features of hand movements and to mitigate inter-subject variations. To this end, we propose a gesture recognition model that uses two different types of sensors and optimizes the feature space towards enhanced accuracy and better generalization. Specifically, we use an accelerometer and a surface electromyography sensor to capture kinematic and physiological signals of hand movements. We use a sliding window to divide the streaming sensor data and then extract time-domain and frequency-domain features from each segment to return feature vectors. Afterwards, the feature space is optimized with a feature selector and a gesture recognizer is optimized. To handle the case where no labeled training data are available for a new user, we apply the transfer learning technique to reuse the cross-subject knowledge. Finally, extensive comparative experiments concerning different classification models, different sensors, and different types of features are conducted. Results show that the joint use of kinematic and physiological sensors generally outperforms the use of single sensor, indicating the synthetic effect of different sensors, and that the use of transfer learning helps improve the cross-subject recognition accuracy. In addition, we quantitatively investigate the impact of null gesture on a gesture recognizer and results indicate that null gesture would lower its accuracy, enlightening related studies to consider it.
    Relation: Multimedia Tools and Applications, vol. 83, pp. 68013-68040
    DOI: 10.1007/s11042-024-18283-z
    Appears in Collections:[Graduate Institute & Department of Computer Science and Information Engineering] Journal Article

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