Michael J. O’Grady Hamed Vahdat-Nejad Klaus-Hendrik Wolf Mauro Dragone Juan Ye Carsten Röcker Gregory O’Hare (Eds.) Communications in Computer and Information Science 413 Evolving Ambient Intelligence AmI 2013 Workshops Dublin, Ireland, December 2013 Revised Selected Papers 123 Communications in Computer and Information Science 413 EditorialBoard SimoneDinizJunqueiraBarbosa PontificalCatholicUniversityofRiodeJaneiro(PUC-Rio), RiodeJaneiro,Brazil PhoebeChen LaTrobeUniversity,Melbourne,Australia AlfredoCuzzocrea ICAR-CNRandUniversityofCalabria,Italy XiaoyongDu RenminUniversityofChina,Beijing,China JoaquimFilipe PolytechnicInstituteofSetúbal,Portugal OrhunKara TÜBI˙TAKBI˙LGEMandMiddleEastTechnicalUniversity,Turkey IgorKotenko St.PetersburgInstituteforInformaticsandAutomation oftheRussianAcademyofSciences,Russia KrishnaM.Sivalingam IndianInstituteofTechnologyMadras,India DominikS´le˛zak UniversityofWarsawandInfobright,Poland TakashiWashio OsakaUniversity,Japan XiaokangYang ShanghaiJiaoTongUniversity,China Michael J. O’Grady Hamed Vahdat-Nejad Klaus-Hendrik Wolf Mauro Dragone JuanYe CarstenRöcker GregoryO’Hare(Eds.) Evolving Ambient Intelligence AmI 2013 Workshops Dublin, Ireland, December 3-5, 2013 Revised Selected Papers 1 3 VolumeEditors MichaelJ.O’Grady UniversityCollegeDublin,Ireland E-mail:[email protected] HamedVahdat-Nejad UniversityofBirjand,Iran E-mail:[email protected] Klaus-HendrikWolf PeterL.ReichertzInstituteforMedicalInformatics Braunschweig,Germany E-mail:[email protected] MauroDragone UniversityCollegeDublin,Ireland E-mail:[email protected] JuanYe UniversityofStAndrews,UK E-mail:[email protected] CarstenRöcker RWTHAachenUniversity,Germany E-mail:[email protected] GregoryO’Hare UniversityCollegeDublin,Ireland E-mail:[email protected] ISSN1865-0929 e-ISSN1865-0937 ISBN978-3-319-04405-7 e-ISBN978-3-319-04406-4 DOI10.1007/978-3-319-04406-4 SpringerChamHeidelbergNewYorkDordrechtLondon LibraryofCongressControlNumber:2013957188 CRSubjectClassification(1998):H.4,H.5,K.4,H.3,I.2,J.4 ©SpringerInternationalPublishingSwitzerland2013 Thisworkissubjecttocopyright.AllrightsarereservedbythePublisher,whetherthewholeorpartof thematerialisconcerned,specificallytherightsoftranslation,reprinting,reuseofillustrations,recitation, broadcasting,reproductiononmicrofilmsorinanyotherphysicalway,andtransmissionorinformation storageandretrieval,electronicadaptation,computersoftware,orbysimilarordissimilarmethodology nowknownorhereafterdeveloped.Exemptedfromthislegalreservationarebriefexcerptsinconnection withreviewsorscholarlyanalysisormaterialsuppliedspecificallyforthepurposeofbeingenteredand executedonacomputersystem,forexclusiveusebythepurchaserofthework.Duplicationofthispublication orpartsthereofispermittedonlyundertheprovisionsoftheCopyrightLawofthePublisher’slocation, inistcurrentversion,andpermissionforusemustalwaysbeobtainedfromSpringer.Permissionsforuse maybeobtainedthroughRightsLinkattheCopyrightClearanceCenter.Violationsareliabletoprosecution undertherespectiveCopyrightLaw. Theuseofgeneraldescriptivenames,registerednames,trademarks,servicemarks,etc.inthispublication doesnotimply,evenintheabsenceofaspecificstatement,thatsuchnamesareexemptfromtherelevant protectivelawsandregulationsandthereforefreeforgeneraluse. Whiletheadviceandinformationinthisbookarebelievedtobetrueandaccurateatthedateofpublication, neithertheauthorsnortheeditorsnorthepublishercanacceptanylegalresponsibilityforanyerrorsor omissionsthatmaybemade.Thepublishermakesnowarranty,expressorimplied,withrespecttothe materialcontainedherein. Typesetting:Camera-readybyauthor,dataconversionbyScientificPublishingServices,Chennai,India Printedonacid-freepaper SpringerispartofSpringerScience+BusinessMedia(www.springer.com) Preface The4thInternationalJointConferenceonAmbientIntelligence(AmI2013)was held in Dublin in December 2013. As is usual with this conference series, a number of workshops were held before the main conference event. The purpose of these workshops was to explore a range of topics necessary for the fulfilment oftheambientintelligencevision.Significantresearchmustbe undertakenifthe attainment ofthis visionis to be achieved. Five workshopsexploreda variety of topics pertinent to the evolution of ambient intelligence. One of the cherished objectives of AmI is the improvement of quality of life inallitsdiversefacets.ThustheInternationalWorkshoponIntelligentEnviron- ments Supporting Healthcare and Well-being (WISHWell 2013) focused on one key aspect, that of the effective provision of social and healthcare to those who need it. Middleware offers an intuitive paradigm for delivering sufficient software ar- tifactabstractionswhendesigningandimplementingarbitrarysystems.Increas- ingly, such systems cannot function in isolation but rather require additional contextual information to enable effective operation. The Third International WorkshoponPervasiveandContext-AwareMiddleware(PerCAM2013)sought to explore issues pertinent to the design and implementation of context-aware middleware platforms. Increasingly,there is a need for integratingrobots with both new and preex- isting infrastructures. This poses many challenges while giving rise to exciting possibilities.TheSecondInternationalWorkshoponAdaptiveRoboticEcologies (ARE 2013) sought to explore how robots may collaborate with a smart device network so as to complete arbitrary tasks in a coordinated and goal-oriented fashion. Within the broad domain of smart environments, a critical challenge is to designfortheacceptanceandadoptionofservices.Fundamentaltothisobjective is the issue of design, and particularly aesthetic design. Thus the International Workshop on Aesthetic Intelligence (AxI 2013) focused on the nature of the design process in smart space contexts. Ambient intelligence straddles a multitude of dimensions; inherent in each dimension is the issue of uncertainty. To successfully deliver human-centric in- frastructures,itisessentialthatuncertaintybemanagedrobustlyandeffectively. Asasteptowardthisobjective,theFirstInternationalWorkshoponUncertainty in Ambient Intelligence (UAmI 2013) strove to identify strategies for managing uncertainty at all stages of the software development process. In conclusion, andonbehalf of the chairsof AmI 2013,I wouldlike to thank all of those involved in the organization and conduct of the workshops. Such VI Preface endeavorsalwaysdemandsignificantcommitmentintermsoftime andefforton thepartofthoseinvolved.Itrustthattheproductionofthisvolumewillprovide a useful and lasting contribution to the evolution of ambient intelligence. December 2013 Michael O’Grady Table of Contents Intelligent Environments Supporting Healthcare and Well-Being Introduction to the 5th International Workshop on Intelligent Environments Supporting Healthcare and Well-Being (WISHWell13) ... 1 Klaus-Hendrik Wolf, Holger Storf, John O’Donoghue, and Juan Carlos Augusto Measuring the Effectiveness of User Interventions in Improving the Seated Posture of Computer Users.............................. 3 Paul Duffy and Alan F. Smeaton Design and Field Evaluation of REMPAD: A Recommender System Supporting Group Reminiscence Therapy ........................... 13 Yang Yang, Niamh Caprani, Adam Bermingham, Julia O’Rourke, R´ona´n Collins, Cathal Gurrin, and Alan F. Smeaton Visibility of Wearable Sensors as Measured Using Eye Tracking Glasses ......................................................... 23 Meggan King, Feiyan Hu, Joanna McHugh, Emma Murphy, Eamonn Newman, Kate Irving, and Alan F. Smeaton Towards a Transfer Learning-Based Approach for Monitoring Fitness Levels .......................................................... 33 Michiel Van Assche, Arun Ramakrishnan, Davy Preuveneers, and Yolande Berbers Unsupervised Learning in Ambient Assisted Living for Pattern and Anomaly Detection: A Survey ................................. 44 Francisco Javier Parada Otte, Bruno Rosales Saurer, and Wilhelm Stork CorrelatingAverageCumulativeMovementandBarthel Index in Acute Elderly Care .................................................... 54 Michael Walsh, Brendan O’Flynn, Cian O’Mathuna, Anne Hickey, and John Kellett Object Tracking AAL Application and Behaviour Modelling for the Elderly and Visually Impaired .............................. 64 Dimitris M. Kyriazanos, George E. Vastianos, Olga E. Segou, and Stelios C.A. Thomopoulos VIII Table of Contents System for Supporting Clinical Professionals Dealing with Chronic Disease Patients ................................................. 78 Simon Kozina, Paolo Emilio Puddu, and Mitja Luˇstrek Adaptive Robotic Ecologies The Integration of ZigBee with the GiraffPlus Robotic Framework ..... 86 Michele Girolami, Filippo Palumbo, Francesco Furfari, and Stefano Chessa Temporal Issues in Teaching Robot Behaviours in a Knowledge-Based Sensorised Home................................................. 102 Joe Saunders, Maha Salem, and Kerstin Dautenhahn EmpiricalMethods forEvaluatingPropertiesofConfigurationPlanning Algorithms...................................................... 114 Lia Susana d.C. Silva-Lopez and Mathias Broxvall People-Centric Adaptive Social Ecology between Intelligent Autonomous Humanoid Robot and Virtual Human for Social Cooperation..................................................... 120 S.M. Mizanoor Rahman A Portable and Self-presenting Robotic Ecology HRI Testbed.......... 136 Anara Sandygulova and Mauro Dragone Uncertainty in Ambient Intelligence A Comparative Study of the Effect of Sensor Noise on Activity Recognition Models .............................................. 151 Robert Ross and John Kelleher A Comparison of Evidence Fusion Rules for Situation Recognition in Sensor-BasedEnvironments..................................... 163 Susan McKeever and Juan Ye In-Network Sensor Data Modelling Methods for Fault Detection ....... 176 Lei Fang and Simon Dobson Non-intrusive Identification of Electrical Appliances .................. 190 Aqeel H. Kazmi, Michael J. O’Grady, and Gregory M.P. O’Hare Aesthetic Intelligence PersonalizedRemotely Monitored Healthcare in Low-Income Countries through Ambient Intelligence...................................... 196 Soenke Ziesche and Sahar Motallebi Table of Contents IX A Visual Interface for Deal Making................................. 205 Daniela Alina Plewe Computer-Mediated Human-Architecture Interaction ................. 213 Kai Kasugai and Carsten Ro¨cker Pervasive and Context-Aware Middleware Applying Semantic Web Technologies to Context Modeling in Ambient Intelligence...................................................... 217 Alexandru Sorici, Olivier Boissier, Gauthier Picard, and Antoine Zimmermann Proximates – A Social Context Engine.............................. 230 H˚akan Jonsson and Pierre Nugues Context-Aware Systems and Adaptive User Authentication............ 240 Kimmo Halunen and Antti Evesti An Ontology-Based Context-Aware Mobile System for On-the-Move Tourists ........................................................ 252 Saleh Alhazbi, Linah Lotfi, Rahma Ali, and Reem Suwailih Modeling the Urban Context through the Theory of Roles ............ 257 Claudia Liliana Zu´n˜iga Can˜o´n and Juan Carlos Burguillo Rial Ubiquitous Applications over Networked Femtocell ................... 266 Hajer Berhouma, Aicha Ben Salem, and Kaouthar Sethom Modeling Context-Awareness in a Pervasive Computing Middleware Using Ontologies and Data Quality Profiles ......................... 271 Sandra Rodr´ıguez-Valenzuela, Juan A. Holgado-Terriza, Plamen Petkov, and Markus Helfert PerspectivesandApplicationofOUIFrameworkwithSMaGInteraction Model .......................................................... 283 Sara Nabil and Atef Ghalwash An Open Architecture to Enhance Pervasiveness and Mobility of Health Care Services ........................................... 296 Iv´an Corredor, Paula Tarr´ıo, Ana M. Bernardos, and Jos´e R. Casar Fiware Infrastructure for Smart Home Applications .................. 308 Alia Bellabas, Fano Ramparany, and Marylin Arndt X Table of Contents Online Learning Based Contextual Model for Mobility Prediction ...... 313 Munir Naveed A Mobile-Based Automation System for Maintenance Inspection and Lifesaving Support in a Smart ICT Building..................... 320 Abdelkader Dekdouk Author Index.................................................. 337
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