/LIMU-BERT-Public

A lite BERT for IMU sensor data

Primary LanguagePython

LIMU-BERT

LIMU-BERT, a novel representation learning model that can make use of unlabeled IMU data and extract generalized rather than task-specific features. LIMU-BERT adopts the principle of natural language model BERT to effectively capture temporal relations and feature distributions in IMU sensor data. With the representations learned via LIMU-BERT, task-specific models trained with limited labeled samples can achieve superior performances. The designed models are lightweight and easily deployable on mobile devices.

Please check our paper LIMU-BERT for more details.

File Overview

This project contains following folders and files.

  • config : config json files of models and training hyper-parameters.
  • dataset : the scripts for preprocessing four open datasets and a config file of key attributes of those datasets.
  • benchmark.py : run DCNN, DeepSense, and R-GRU.
  • classifier.py : run LIMU-GRU that inputs representations learned by LIMU-BERT and output labels for target applications.
  • classifier_bert.py : run LIMU-GRU that inputs raw IMU readings and output labels for target applications.
  • config.py : some helper functions for loading settings.
  • embedding.py : generates representation or embeddings for raw IMU readings given a pre-trained LIMU-BERT.
  • models.py : the implementations of LIMU-BERT, LIMU-GRU, and other baseline models.
  • plot.py : some helper function for plotting IMU sensor data or learned representations.
  • pretrain.py : pretrain LIMU-BERT.
  • statistic.py : some helper functions for evaluation.
  • train.py : several helper functions for training models.
  • utils.py : some helper functions for preprocessing data or separating dataset.

Setup

This repository has be tested for Python 3.7.7/3.8.5 and Pytorch 1.5.1/1.7.1. To install all dependencies, use the following command:

$ pip install -r requirements.txt

Dataset

In the dataset folder, we provide four scripts that preprocess the corresponding datasets. Those datasets are widely utilized in the previous studies:

Each script has a kernel function which reads the raw IMU data and output preprocessed data and label. You can set the sampling rate and window size (sequence length) in the functiono. It retures two values:

  • Data: a numpy array with the shape of (N*W*F), N is the number of samples, W is the windows size, and F is the number of features (6 or 9).
  • Label: a numpy array with the shape of (N*W*L), N is the number of samples, W is the windows size, and L is the number of label types (e.g., activity and user labels). The detailed label information is provided in data_config.json.

The two numpy arrays are saved as "data_X_Y.npy" and "label_X_Y.npy" in each dataset folder, where X represents the sampling rate and Y is the window size. For example, all data and label are saved as "data_20_120.npy" and "label_20_120.npy" in the settings of LIMU-BERT. And the data and label arrays of HHAR dataset are saved in the dataset/hhar folder.

Framework

In our framework, there are two phases:

  • Self-supervised training phase: train LIMU-BERT with unlabeled IMU data.
  • Supervised training phase: train LIMU-GRU based on the learned representations.

In implementation, there are three steps to run the codes:

  • pretrain.py : pretrain LIMU-BERT and the decoder.
  • embedding.py : generates and save representations learned by LIMU-BERT.
  • classifier.py : load representations and train a task-specific classifier.

For other baseline models, directly run benchmark.py.

Usage

pretrain.py, embedding.py, classifier.py, benchmark.py, and classifier_bert.py share the same usage pattern.

usage: xxx.py [-h] [-g GPU] [-f MODEL_FILE] [-t TRAIN_CFG] [-a MASK_CFG]
                   [-l LABEL_INDEX] [-s SAVE_MODEL]
                   model_version {hhar,motion,uci,shoaib} {10_100,20_120}

positional arguments:
  model_version         Model config, e.g. v1
  {hhar,motion,uci,shoaib}
                        Dataset name
  {10_100,20_120}       Dataset version

optional arguments:
  -h, --help            show this help message and exit
  -g GPU, --gpu GPU     Set specific GPU
  -f MODEL_FILE, --model_file MODEL_FILE
                        Pretrain model file, default: None
  -t TRAIN_CFG, --train_cfg TRAIN_CFG
                        Training config json file path
  -a MASK_CFG, --mask_cfg MASK_CFG
                        Mask strategy json file path, default: config/mask.json
  -l LABEL_INDEX, --label_index LABEL_INDEX
                        Label Index setting the task, default: -1
  -s SAVE_MODEL, --save_model SAVE_MODEL
                        The saved model name, default: 'model'

Example:

pretrain.py v1 uci 20_120 -s limu_v1 

For this command, we will train a LIMU-BERT, whose settings are defined in the based_v1 of limu_bert.json, with the UCI dataset "data_20_120.npy" and "label_20_120.npy". The trained model will be saved as "limu_v1.pt" in the saved/pretrain_base_uci_20_120 folder. The mask and train settings are defined in the mask.json and pretrain.json, respectively.

In the main function of pretrain.py, you can set following parameters:

  • training_rate: float, defines the proportion of unlabeled training data we want to use. The default value is 0.8.

Example:

embedding.py v1 uci 20_120 -f limu_v1

For this command, we will load the pretrained LIMU-BERT from file "limu_v1.pt" in the saved/pretrain_base_uci_20_120 folder. And embedding.py will save the learned representations as "embed_limu_v1_uci_20_120.npy" in the embed folder.

Example:

classifier.py v2 uci 20_120 -f limu_v1 -s limu_gru_v1 -l 0

For this command, we will load the embeddings or representations from "embed_limu_v1_uci_20_120.npy" and train the GRU classifier , whose settings are defined in the gru_v2 of classifier.json. The trained GRU classifier will be saved as "limu_gru_v1.pt" in the saved/classifier_base_uci_20_120 folder. The target task corresponds to the first label in "label_20_120.npy" of UCI dataset, which is a human activity recognition task defined in data_config.json. The train settings are defined in the train.json.

In the main function of classifier.py, you can set following parameters:

  • training_rate: float, defines the proportion of unlabeled data that the pretrained LIMU-BERT uses. The default value is 0.8. Note that this value must be equal to the training_rate in the pretrain.py.
  • label_rate: float, defines the proportion of labeled data to the unlabeled training data that the GRU classifier uses.
  • balance: bool, defines whether it should use balanced labeled samples among the multiple classes. Default: True.
  • method: str, defines the classifier type from {gru, lstm, cnn1, cnn2, attn}. Default: gru.

If you are confused about the above settings, please check the Section 4.1.1 in our paper for more details.

Example:

classifier_bert.py v1_v2 uci 20_120 -f limu_v1 -s limu_gru_v1 -l 0

For this command, we will train the a composite classifier with the pretrained LIMU-BERT and GRU classifier , whose settings are defined in the gru_v2 of classifier.json. The trained LIMU-GRU classifier will be saved as "limu_gru_v1.pt" in the saved/bert_classifier_base_uci_20_120 folder. The train settings are defined in the bert_classifier_train.json. Note that "v1_v2" defines two model versions, which corresponds to the LIMU-BERT and GRU classifier, respectively.

Example:

benchmark.py v1 uci 20_120 -s dcnn_v1 -l 0

For this command, we will train a DCNN model, whose settings are defined in the dcnn_v1 of classifier.json. The trained DCNN classifier will be saved as "dcnn_v1.pt" in the saved/bench_dcnn_uci_20_120 folder.

In the main function of benchmark.py, the parameters are the same to those in classifier.py.

Citation

LIMU-BERT: Unleashing the Potential of Unlabeled Data for IMU Sensing Applications

@inproceedings{xu2021limu,
  title={LIMU-BERT: Unleashing the Potential of Unlabeled Data for IMU Sensing Applications},
  author={Xu, Huatao and Zhou, Pengfei and Tan, Rui and Li, Mo and Shen, Guobin},
  booktitle={Proceedings of the 19th ACM Conference on Embedded Networked Sensor Systems},
  pages={220--233},
  year={2021}
}

Contact

huatao001@e.ntu.edu.sg (preferred)

735820057@qq.com