Arm-CODA: A Data Set of Upper-limb Human Movement During Routine Examination
Sylvain W. Combettes, Paul Boniol, Antoine Mazarguil, Danping Wang, Diego Vaquero-Ramos, Marion Chauveau, Laurent Oudre, Nicolas Vayatis, Pierre-Paul Vidal, Alexandra Roren, Marie-Martine Lefèvre-Colau
published
2024-01-18
reference
Sylvain W. Combettes, Paul Boniol, Antoine Mazarguil, Danping Wang, Diego Vaquero-Ramos, Marion Chauveau, Laurent Oudre, Nicolas Vayatis, Pierre-Paul Vidal, Alexandra Roren, and Marie-Martine Lefèvre-Colau, Arm-CODA: A Data Set of Upper-limb Human Movement During Routine Examination, Image Processing On Line, 14 (2024), pp. 1–13. https://doi.org/10.5201/ipol.2024.494

Communicated by Jean-Michel Morel and Miguel Colom
Demo edited by Sylvain Combettes and Paul Boniol

Abstract

This article thoroughly describes a data set of 240 multivariate time series collected using 34 Cartesian Optoelectronic Dynamic Anthropometer (CODA) markers placed on the upper limb of 16 healthy subjects each undergoing 15 predefined movements such as raising their arms or combing their hair. Each sensor records its position in the 3D space. In total, 2.5 hours of time series are collected. A remarkable aspect of this data set is the extensive availability of metadata: subjects' characteristics (age, height, etc.) as well as movements' annotations. Indeed, for each subject and each movement, the start and end time stamps of at least two iterations of the same movement are provided. In addition to the study of human motion, this data set can be used to evaluate generic time series analytical tasks such as multivariate time series segmentation, clustering or classification.

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