WaveGlove: Transformer-based hand gesture recognition using multiple inertial sensors

05/04/2021
by   Matej Králik, et al.
0

Hand Gesture Recognition (HGR) based on inertial data has grown considerably in recent years, with the state-of-the-art approaches utilizing a single handheld sensor and a vocabulary comprised of simple gestures. In this work we explore the benefits of using multiple inertial sensors. Using WaveGlove, a custom hardware prototype in the form of a glove with five inertial sensors, we acquire two datasets consisting of over 11000 samples. To make them comparable with prior work, they are normalized along with 9 other publicly available datasets, and subsequently used to evaluate a range of Machine Learning approaches for gesture recognition, including a newly proposed Transformer-based architecture. Our results show that even complex gestures involving different fingers can be recognized with high accuracy. An ablation study performed on the acquired datasets demonstrates the importance of multiple sensors, with an increase in performance when using up to three sensors and no significant improvements beyond that.

READ FULL TEXT
research
01/25/2021

AirWare: Utilizing Embedded Audio and Infrared Signals for In-Air Hand-Gesture Recognition

We introduce AirWare, an in-air hand-gesture recognition system that use...
research
03/18/2023

Recognizing Complex Gestures on Minimalistic Knitted Sensors: Toward Real-World Interactive Systems

Developments in touch-sensitive textiles have enabled many novel interac...
research
09/24/2019

Learning deep representations for video-based intake gesture detection

Automatic detection of individual intake gestures during eating occasion...
research
08/08/2023

From Unimodal to Multimodal: improving the sEMG-Based Pattern Recognition via deep generative models

Multimodal hand gesture recognition (HGR) systems can achieve higher rec...
research
07/31/2020

OREBA: A Dataset for Objectively Recognizing Eating Behaviour and Associated Intake

Automatic detection of intake gestures is a key element of automatic die...
research
08/07/2020

Single-stage intake gesture detection using CTC loss and extended prefix beam search

Accurate detection of individual intake gestures is a key step towards a...
research
11/25/2021

SCLAiR : Supervised Contrastive Learning for User and Device Independent Airwriting Recognition

Airwriting Recognition is the problem of identifying letters written in ...

Please sign up or login with your details

Forgot password? Click here to reset