This thesis presents an unsupervised method for discovering and analyzing the different
kinds of activities in an active environment. Drawing from natural language processing, a
novel representation of activities as bags of event n-grams is introduced, where the global
structural information of activities using their local event statistics is analyzed. It is demonstrated how maximal cliques in an undirected edge-weighted graph of activities, can be used in an unsupervised manner, to discover the different activity-classes. Taking on some work done in computer networks and bio-informatics, it is shown how to characterize these discovered activity-classes from a wholestic as well as a by-parts view-point. A definition of anomalous activities is formulated along with a way to detect them based on the difference of an activity instance from each of the discovered activity-classes. Finally, an information theoretic method to explain the detected anomalies in a human-interpretable form is presented. Results over extensive data-sets, collected from multiple active environments are
presented, to show the competence and generalizability of the proposed framework.
Identifer | oai:union.ndltd.org:GATECH/oai:smartech.gatech.edu:1853/14131 |
Date | 28 November 2005 |
Creators | Hamid, Muhammad Raffay |
Publisher | Georgia Institute of Technology |
Source Sets | Georgia Tech Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Archive |
Language | en_US |
Detected Language | English |
Type | Thesis |
Format | 767333 bytes, application/pdf |
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