Human Activity Recognition through Skeleton-Based Motion Analysis Using YOLOv8 and Graph Convolutional Networks
Downloads
Published
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.58414/SCIENTIFICTEMPER.2025.16.12.12Keywords:
Human Activity Recognition, Deep Learning, Graph Convolutional Networks, Skeleton-based Analysis, Temporal Convolutional Networks, YOLOv8Dimensions Badge
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2025 The Scientific Temper

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
Human Activity Recognition has become an important research domain in developing intelligent systems for sectors such as healthcare, behavioral analytics, and surveillance monitoring. Traditional vision-based HAR approaches have limitations in terms of subject variability, occlusion, and background clutter. To address this, a novel skeleton-based motion analysis model is proposed to enhance the precision and temporal understanding of human motions by combining real-time keypoint extraction with graph-structured spatial-temporal learning. The proposed YOLOv8 + Graph Temporal Convolution for Human Activity Recognition (YGTC-HAR) consists of four essential stages, including: (1) YOLOv8-Pose to detect human figures in real-time, and (2) Graph Convolutional Network (GCN) is used to transform the joint coordinates into a graph representation graph representation. (3) The Temporal Convolutional Network (TCN) is designed to learn the sequential motion dynamics and time-dependent characteristics of human activities. Additionally, Genetic Algorithm (GA) and Bayesian Optimization (BO) are adopted to fine-tune hyperparameters, including learning rate, dropout ratio, and convolutional filters. MHealth and WISDM datasets are utilized in this research to enable comprehensive testing across static and dynamic movements. The proposed YGTC-HAR is implemented using Python (with TensorFlow and PyTorch) for deep learning, and MATLAB R2023b is used for signal processing, graphical visualization, and performance validation. The proposed work is compared against existing HLA, SMO-DNN, AMC-CNN, and YOLOv8-ViT models. The model achieves 97.6% accuracy, 98.4% sensitivity, 97.8% specificity, 97.2% F1-score, 96.4% MCC, and an AUC of 0.96, which outperforms the existing models by over 4.3%. The proposed YGTC-HAR serves as a single end-to-end HAR framework that delivers superior generalization, real-time performance, and reliability for HCIA (Human-Centered Intelligent Applications). The novelty of the model lies in the combination of YOLOv8-driven skeleton extraction, GCN-based spatial modeling, TCN-driven temporal learning, and adaptive optimization.Abstract
How to Cite
Downloads
Similar Articles
- Jambhu Kumar V, Anusha M, Data Centre Optimization for Cloud Computing and Virtualization , The Scientific Temper: Vol. 17 No. 05 (2026): The Scientific Temper
- Ruchira P Dudhrejiya, A critical analysis of power dynamics in Vijay Tendulkar's theatrical tapestry , The Scientific Temper: Vol. 15 No. spl-2 (2024): The Scientific Temper
- P. Rathinabhagya, J. Merline Vinotha, Fuzzy vehicle routing problem for a municipal solid waste management system with greenhouse gas emission at various disposal stages , The Scientific Temper: Vol. 16 No. 04 (2025): The Scientific Temper
- Ishfaq Ahmad Malik, Showkat Ahmad Shah, Economic impact of COVID-19 on Ethiopian micro, small, and medium enterprises and policy measures , The Scientific Temper: Vol. 14 No. 02 (2023): The Scientific Temper
- Shivani Goel, Rashmi Ashtt, Monali Wankar, Analyzing the impact of crime on quality of life in Old Delhi: A quantitative approach , The Scientific Temper: Vol. 15 No. 04 (2024): The Scientific Temper
- Manisha Anil Vhora, Vidya Bhandwalkar, Prashant Mangesh Rege, AI-driven HR analytics: Enhancing decision-making in workforce planning , The Scientific Temper: Vol. 15 No. 04 (2024): The Scientific Temper
- Suresh L. Chitragar, Occupational Structure of Population in the Malaprabha River Basin, Karnataka State, India; A Geographical Approach , The Scientific Temper: Vol. 15 No. 01 (2024): The Scientific Temper
- V. Manikandabalaji, R. Sivakumar, V. Maniraj, A novel approach using type-II fuzzy differential evolution is proposed for identifying and diagnosis of diabetes using semantic ontology , The Scientific Temper: Vol. 15 No. 03 (2024): The Scientific Temper
- Manikant Tripathi, Sukriti Pathak, Ranjan Singh, Pankaj Singh, Pradeep K. Singh, Nivedita Prasad, Sadanand Maurya, Awadhesh Kumar Shukla, Adsorptive remediation of hexavalent chromium using agro-waste rice husk: Optimization of process parameters and functional groups characterization using FTIR analysis , The Scientific Temper: Vol. 15 No. 04 (2024): The Scientific Temper
- Y. Mohammed Iqbal, M. Mohamed Surputheen, S. Peerbasha, Swarm intelligence-driven HC2NN model for optimized COVID-19 detection using lung imaging , The Scientific Temper: Vol. 16 No. 03 (2025): The Scientific Temper
<< < 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 > >>
You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.
Most read articles by the same author(s)
- Deepa Ramachandran VR VR, Kamalraj N, Hybrid deep segmentation architecture using dual attention U-Net and Mask-RCNN for accurate detection of pests, diseases, and weeds in crops , The Scientific Temper: Vol. 16 No. 07 (2025): The Scientific Temper

