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Figuring Out Conscientious Degree from Brightness Distribution in IADL
Authors:
Shota Shimayoshi
Shun Okamura
Yusuke Kajiwara
Hiromitsu Shimakawa
Keywords: Elderly, Daily Living, Privacy, Brightness, Sensor
Abstract:
Because of the rapid increase of the elderly, the lack of helpers to take care of the elderly has become a serious problem in Japan.. A way should be found to enable the elderly to be independent as long as possible. The paper refers to the motivation to keep the quality of life high as living willingness. The elderly with living willingness would keep their living environments comfortable. On the contrary, the elderly losing their living willingness are likely to make disorder in their house keeping, such as lazy cleaning and skipping of dish washing. The detection of the disorder of their daily activities makes it possible to find the decline of their living willingness early, because the disorder implies their physical and mental health get worse. Instrumental Activities of Daily Living (IADL) plays an important role to find the disorder. The activities are conducted to improve the quality of life. The laziness of the elderly in IADL implies they are losing their motivation to improve the quality of life. The paper proposes a method to recognize IADL, preserving the privacy of the elderly. It also figures out conscientious degree the elderly take IADL. The method uses the brightness distribution sensor. It provides a classifier of IADL from the brightness distribution. In an experiment for the elderly, the f-measure with which the method has recognized activities of cleaning, cooking, and washing are 0.975, 0.912, and 0.927, respectively. The experiment shows 0.599 in Nagelkerke R2, which indicates how well the method figures out conscientious degree in the activities. It reveals the method is precise enough to measure the decline of the elderly in the living willingness.
Pages: 101 to 106
Copyright: Copyright (c) IARIA, 2015
Publication date: August 23, 2015
Published in: conference
ISSN: 2308-3514
ISBN: 978-1-61208-426-8
Location: Venice, Italy
Dates: from August 23, 2015 to August 28, 2015