Efficient and Personalized Federated Learning for Human Activity Recognition on Resource-Constrained Devices

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Human Activity Recognition (HAR) using wearable sensors enables impactful applications in healthcare, fitness, and smart environments, but it also faces challenges related to data privacy, non-independent and identically distributed (non-IID) data, and limited computational resources on edge devices. This study proposes an efficient and personalized federated learning (PFL) framework for HAR that integrates federated training with model compression and per-client fine-tuning to address these challenges and support deployment on resource-constrained devices (RCDs). A convolutional neural network (CNN) is trained across multiple clients using FedAvg, followed by magnitude-based pruning and float16 quantization to reduce model size. While personalization and compression have previously been studied independently, their combined application for HAR remains underexplored in federated settings. Experimental results show that the global FedAvg model experiences performance degradation under non-IID conditions, which is further amplified after pruning, whereas per-client personalization substantially improves performance by adapting the model to individual user patterns. To ensure realistic evaluation, experiments are conducted using both random and temporal data splits, with the latter mitigating temporal leakage in time-series data. Personalization consistently improves performance under both settings, while quantization reduces the model footprint by approximately 50%, enabling deployment on wearable and IoT devices. Statistical analysis using paired significance tests confirms the robustness of the observed performance gains. Overall, this work demonstrates that combining lightweight model compression with personalization providing an effective and practical solution for federated HAR, balancing accuracy, efficiency, and deployment feasibility in real-world scenarios.
Original languageEnglish
Article number700
Pages (from-to)1-20
Number of pages20
JournalApplied Sciences
Volume16
Issue number2
Early online date8 Jan 2026
DOIs
Publication statusPublished (in print/issue) - 8 Jan 2026

Bibliographical note

© 2026 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.

Data Access Statement

The data presented in this study are available within the article.

Funding

This research was funded by Dell Technologies through a PhD Scholarship. No specific grant number is applicable.

    Keywords

    • federated learning
    • human activity recognition
    • personalization
    • non-IID data
    • resource constrained devices
    • model compression
    • pruning
    • quantization

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