English

Unsupervised explainable activity prediction in competitive Nordic Walking from experimental data

Machine Learning 2024-06-19 v1 Artificial Intelligence Human-Computer Interaction

Abstract

Artificial Intelligence (AI) has found application in Human Activity Recognition (HAR) in competitive sports. To date, most Machine Learning (ML) approaches for HAR have relied on offline (batch) training, imposing higher computational and tagging burdens compared to online processing unsupervised approaches. Additionally, the decisions behind traditional ML predictors are opaque and require human interpretation. In this work, we apply an online processing unsupervised clustering approach based on low-cost wearable Inertial Measurement Units (IMUs). The outcomes generated by the system allow for the automatic expansion of limited tagging available (e.g., by referees) within those clusters, producing pertinent information for the explainable classification stage. Specifically, our work focuses on achieving automatic explainability for predictions related to athletes' activities, distinguishing between correct, incorrect, and cheating practices in Nordic Walking. The proposed solution achieved performance metrics of close to 100 % on average.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2406.12762,
  title  = {Unsupervised explainable activity prediction in competitive Nordic Walking from experimental data},
  author = {Silvia García-Méndez and Francisco de Arriba-Pérez and Francisco J. González-Castaño and Javier Vales-Alonso},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2406.12762},
  year   = {2024}
}
R2 v1 2026-06-28T17:10:36.943Z