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Development of ergonomic posture recognition technique based on 2D ordinary camera for construction hazard prevention through view-invariant features in 2D skeleton motion
Affiliation:1. Department of Systems Design Engineering, University of Waterloo, 200 University Ave W, N2L 3G1 Waterloo, ON, Canada;2. Civil Infrastructure Sensing Laboratory, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of Waterloo, 200 University Ave W, N2L 3G1 Waterloo, ON, Canada;1. Department of Construction Management, Tsinghua University, Beijing, China;2. Department of Computer Science and Technology, Tsinghua University, Beijing, China;3. Department of Building and Real Estate, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hong Kong;4. School of Engineering and Built Environment, Queensland University of Technology (QUT), Australia;1. Department of Building and Real Estate, Faculty of Construction and Environment, Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Room No. ZN1002, Hung Hom, Kowloon, Hong Kong Special Administrative Region;2. Department of Building and Real Estate, Faculty of Construction and Environment, Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Room No. ZS734, Hung Hom, Kowloon, Hong Kong Special Administrative Region
Abstract:Outdoor tasks operated by construction workers are physically demanding, requiring awkward postures leading to pain, injury, accident, or permanent disability. Ergonomic posture recognition (EPR) technique could be a novel solution for ergonomic hazard monitoring and assessment, yet non-intrusiveness and applicability in complex outdoor environment are always critical considerations for device selection in construction site. Thus, we choose RGB camera to capture skeleton motions, which is non-intrusive for workers compared with wearable sensors. It is also stable and widely used in an outdoor construction site considering various light conditions and complex working areas. This study aims to develop an ergonomic posture recognition technique based on 2D ordinary camera for construction hazard prevention through view-invariant features in 2D skeleton motion. Based on captured 2D skeleton motion samples in the test-run, view-invariant features as classifier inputs were extracted to ensure the learned classifier not sensitive to various camera viewpoints and distances to a worker. Three posture classifiers regarding human back, arms, and legs were employed to ensure three postures to be recognized simultaneously in one video frame. The average accuracies of three classifiers in 5-fold cross validation were as high as 95.0%, 96.5%, and 97.6%, respectively, and the overall accuracies tested by three new activities regarding ergonomic assessment scores captured from different camera heights and viewpoints were 89.2%, 88.3%, and 87.6%, respectively. The developed EPR-aided construction accident auto-prevention technique demonstrated robust accuracy to support on-site postural ergonomic assessment for construction workers’ safety and health assurance.
Keywords:Ergonomics  Person posture recognition  RGB camera  2D skeleton  View-invariant  Construction worker
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