IEICE Transactions on Information and Systems
Online ISSN : 1745-1361
Print ISSN : 0916-8532
Special Section on Emerging Technologies of Ubiquitous Computing Systems
Shaka: User Movement Estimation Considering Reliability, Power Saving, and Latency Using Mobile Phone
Arei KOBAYASHIShigeki MURAMATSUDaisuke KAMISAKATakafumi WATANABEAtsunori MINAMIKAWATakeshi IWAMOTOHiroyuki YOKOYAMA
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2011 Volume E94.D Issue 6 Pages 1153-1163

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Abstract

This paper proposes a method for using an accelerometer, microphone, and GPS in a mobile phone to recognize the movement of the user. Past attempts at identifying the movement associated with riding on a bicycle, train, bus or car and common human movements like standing still, walking or running have had problems with poor accuracy due to factors such as sudden changes in vibration or times when the vibrations resembled those for other types of movement. Moreover, previous methods have had problems with has the problem of high power consumption because of the sensor processing load. The proposed method aims to avoid these problems by estimating the reliability of the inference result, and by combining two inference modes to decrease the power consumption. Field trials demonstrate that our method achieves 90% or better average accuracy for the seven types of movement listed above. Shaka's power saving functionality enables us to extend the battery life of a mobile phone to over 100 hours while our estimation algorithm is running in the background. Furthermore, this paper uses experimental results to show the trade-off between accuracy and latency when estimating user activity.

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© 2011 The Institute of Electronics, Information and Communication Engineers
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