Stephen Marsland

Stephen Marsland is Professor of Scientific Computing in the School of Engineering and Advanced Technology (SEAT) at Massey University in New Zealand. He has a degree in mathematics from Oxford University and a PhD from Manchester University. He arrived at Massey in 2004 following postdoc positions in the US and Europe. Stephen's research interests lie in the areas of Euler equations on diffeomorphism groups, machine learning and behaviour recognition, and complexity. He is currently supported by the RSNZ Marsden Fund.

Publications

Human Behaviour Recognition in Ambient Intelligent Environments
Hans W. Guesgen, Stephen Marsland. © 2015. 15 pages.
The recognition of human behaviour from sensor observations is an important area of research in smart homes and ambient intelligence. In this chapter, the authors introduce the...
Human Behavior Recognition Technologies: Intelligent Applications for Monitoring and Security
Hans W. Guesgen, Stephen Marsland. © 2013. 378 pages.
Recently, the ICT field has seen a shift from machine-centered focuses to human and user knowledge-based approaches. However, as priorities shift, questions arise on how to...
Towards Behaviour Recognition with Unlabelled Sensor Data: As Much as Necessary, as Little as Possible
Sook-Ling Chua, Stephen Marsland, Hans W. Guesgen. © 2013. 25 pages.
The problem of behaviour recognition based on data from sensors is essentially an inverse problem: given a set of sensor observations, identify the sequence of behaviours that...
Spatio-Temporal Footprints
Hans W. Guesgen, Stephen Marsland. © 2012. 7 pages.
The recognition of human behaviour from sensor observations is an important area of research in smart homes and ambient intelligence. In this paper, we introduce the idea of...
Recognising Human Behaviour in a Spatio-Temporal Context
Hans W. Guesgen, Stephen Marsland. © 2011. 17 pages.
Identifying human behaviours in smart homes from sensor observations is an important research problem. The addition of contextual information about environmental circumstances...
Spatio-Temporal Footprints
Hans W. Guesgen, Stephen Marsland. © 2010. 7 pages.
The recognition of human behaviour from sensor observations is an important area of research in smart homes and ambient intelligence. In this paper, we introduce the idea of...