PRIDE (Personal Risk Detection) dataset

Citation Author(s):
Ari Yair
Barrera-Animas
Luis A.
Trejo
Tecnologico de Monterrey
Submitted by:
Miryam Elizabet...
Last updated:
Fri, 02/09/2024 - 17:03
DOI:
10.21227/xf13-b260
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Abstract 

We define personal risk detection as the timely identification of when someone is in the midst of a dangerous situation, for example, a health crisis or a car accident, events that may jeopardize a person’s physical integrity. We work under the hypothesis that a risk-prone situation produces sudden and significant deviations in standard physiological and behavioural user patterns. These changes can be captured by a group of sensors, such as the accelerometer, gyroscope, and heart rate.

The PRIDE (Personal Risk Detection) dataset is built with the help of 18 test subjects and a period of data collection of one week each, 24 h per day; the normal conditions dataset (NCDS) is built in this manner. Next, to build the anomaly conditions dataset (ACDS), the same 18 test subjects collaborate in another process to gather data under specific abnormal or stressful conditions. The scenarios include activities such as running several meters, going up and down the stairs of a several-floor building as fast as possible, simulating a fight, and so on.

 

 — Dataset usage terms : The use of the data is only for scientific purposes, please provide the corresponding credit to the owners when publishing any work based on this data

  

Please cite:

Ari Yair Barrera-Animas, Luis A. Trejo, Miguel Angel Medina-Pérez, Raúl Monroy, J. Benito Camiña, and Fernando Godínez. 2017. Online personal risk detection based on behavioural and physiological patterns. Information Sciences 384, (2017), 281–297. doi: 10.1016/j.ins.2016.08.006

 

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Instructions: 

The documentation of the dataset is included in the zip file.