The ubiquitous availability of wearable sensing devices has rendered large scale collection of movement data a straightforward endeavor. Yet, annotation of these data remains a challenge and as such, publicly available datasets for human activity recognition (HAR) are typically limited in size as well as in variability, which constrains HAR model training and effectiveness. We introduce masked reconstruction as a viable self-supervised pre-training objective for human activity recognition and explore its effectiveness in comparison to state-of-the-art unsupervised learning techniques. In scenarios with small labeled datasets, the pre-training results in improvements over end-to-end learning on two of the four benchmark datasets. This is promising because the pre-training objective can be integrated "as is"into state-of-the-art recognition pipelines to effectively facilitate improved model robustness, and thus, ultimately, leading to better recognition performance.
CITATION STYLE
Haresamudram, H., Beedu, A., Agrawal, V., Grady, P. L., Essa, I., Hoffman, J., & Plötz, T. (2020). Masked reconstruction based self-supervision for human activity recognition. In Proceedings - International Symposium on Wearable Computers, ISWC (pp. 45–49). Association for Computing Machinery. https://doi.org/10.1145/3410531.3414306
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