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SIMADL: Simulated Activities of Daily Living Dataset

Author

Listed:
  • Talal Alshammari

    (Staffordshire University, College Road, ST4 2DE Stoke-on-Trent, UK
    College of Computer Science and Engineering, University of Hail, Hail 81481, Saudi Arabia)

  • Nasser Alshammari

    (Staffordshire University, College Road, ST4 2DE Stoke-on-Trent, UK
    College of Information and Computer Science, Al Jouf University, Sakaka 72388, Saudi Arabia)

  • Mohamed Sedky

    (Staffordshire University, College Road, ST4 2DE Stoke-on-Trent, UK)

  • Chris Howard

    (Staffordshire University, College Road, ST4 2DE Stoke-on-Trent, UK)

Abstract

With the realisation of the Internet of Things (IoT) paradigm, the analysis of the Activities of Daily Living (ADLs), in a smart home environment, is becoming an active research domain. The existence of representative datasets is a key requirement to advance the research in smart home design. Such datasets are an integral part of the visualisation of new smart home concepts as well as the validation and evaluation of emerging machine learning models. Machine learning techniques that can learn ADLs from sensor readings are used to classify, predict and detect anomalous patterns. Such techniques require data that represent relevant smart home scenarios, for training, testing and validation. However, the development of such machine learning techniques is limited by the lack of real smart home datasets, due to the excessive cost of building real smart homes. This paper provides two datasets for classification and anomaly detection. The datasets are generated using OpenSHS, (Open Smart Home Simulator), which is a simulation software for dataset generation. OpenSHS records the daily activities of a participant within a virtual environment. Seven participants simulated their ADLs for different contexts, e.g., weekdays, weekends, mornings and evenings. Eighty-four files in total were generated, representing approximately 63 days worth of activities. Forty-two files of classification of ADLs were simulated in the classification dataset and the other forty-two files are for anomaly detection problems in which anomalous patterns were simulated and injected into the anomaly detection dataset.

Suggested Citation

  • Talal Alshammari & Nasser Alshammari & Mohamed Sedky & Chris Howard, 2018. "SIMADL: Simulated Activities of Daily Living Dataset," Data, MDPI, vol. 3(2), pages 1-13, April.
  • Handle: RePEc:gam:jdataj:v:3:y:2018:i:2:p:11-:d:139083
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    Cited by:

    1. Akira A. de Moura Galvão Uematsu & Anarosa A. F. Brandão, 2023. "eMailMe: A Method to Build Datasets of Corporate Emails in Portuguese," Data, MDPI, vol. 8(8), pages 1-12, July.

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