Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Bekhit, Mahmoud, Salah, Ahmad, Alrawahi, Ahmed Salim, Attia, Tarek, Ali, Ahmed, Eldesokey, Esraa, Fathalla, Ahmed
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2507.10334
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1866912481726693376
author Bekhit, Mahmoud
Salah, Ahmad
Alrawahi, Ahmed Salim
Attia, Tarek
Ali, Ahmed
Eldesokey, Esraa
Fathalla, Ahmed
author_facet Bekhit, Mahmoud
Salah, Ahmad
Alrawahi, Ahmed Salim
Attia, Tarek
Ali, Ahmed
Eldesokey, Esraa
Fathalla, Ahmed
contents Motion capture (MoCap) data from wearable Inertial Measurement Units (IMUs) is vital for applications in sports science, but its utility is often compromised by missing data. Despite numerous imputation techniques, a systematic performance evaluation for IMU-derived MoCap time-series data is lacking. We address this gap by conducting a comprehensive comparative analysis of statistical, machine learning, and deep learning imputation methods. Our evaluation considers three distinct contexts: univariate time-series, multivariate across subjects, and multivariate across kinematic angles. To facilitate this benchmark, we introduce the first publicly available MoCap dataset designed specifically for imputation, featuring data from 53 karate practitioners. We simulate three controlled missingness mechanisms: missing completely at random (MCAR), block missingness, and a novel value-dependent pattern at signal transition points. Our experiments, conducted on 39 kinematic variables across all subjects, reveal that multivariate imputation frameworks consistently outperform univariate approaches, particularly for complex missingness. For instance, multivariate methods achieve up to a 50% mean absolute error reduction (MAE from 10.8 to 5.8) compared to univariate techniques for transition point missingness. Advanced models like Generative Adversarial Imputation Networks (GAIN) and Iterative Imputers demonstrate the highest accuracy in these challenging scenarios. This work provides a critical baseline for future research and offers practical recommendations for improving the integrity and robustness of Mo-Cap data analysis.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2507_10334
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle MoCap-Impute: A Comprehensive Benchmark and Comparative Analysis of Imputation Methods for IMU-based Motion Capture Data
Bekhit, Mahmoud
Salah, Ahmad
Alrawahi, Ahmed Salim
Attia, Tarek
Ali, Ahmed
Eldesokey, Esraa
Fathalla, Ahmed
Machine Learning
Motion capture (MoCap) data from wearable Inertial Measurement Units (IMUs) is vital for applications in sports science, but its utility is often compromised by missing data. Despite numerous imputation techniques, a systematic performance evaluation for IMU-derived MoCap time-series data is lacking. We address this gap by conducting a comprehensive comparative analysis of statistical, machine learning, and deep learning imputation methods. Our evaluation considers three distinct contexts: univariate time-series, multivariate across subjects, and multivariate across kinematic angles. To facilitate this benchmark, we introduce the first publicly available MoCap dataset designed specifically for imputation, featuring data from 53 karate practitioners. We simulate three controlled missingness mechanisms: missing completely at random (MCAR), block missingness, and a novel value-dependent pattern at signal transition points. Our experiments, conducted on 39 kinematic variables across all subjects, reveal that multivariate imputation frameworks consistently outperform univariate approaches, particularly for complex missingness. For instance, multivariate methods achieve up to a 50% mean absolute error reduction (MAE from 10.8 to 5.8) compared to univariate techniques for transition point missingness. Advanced models like Generative Adversarial Imputation Networks (GAIN) and Iterative Imputers demonstrate the highest accuracy in these challenging scenarios. This work provides a critical baseline for future research and offers practical recommendations for improving the integrity and robustness of Mo-Cap data analysis.
title MoCap-Impute: A Comprehensive Benchmark and Comparative Analysis of Imputation Methods for IMU-based Motion Capture Data
topic Machine Learning
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2507.10334