“…We need to take the sampling rate of sensors into account with respect to the number of samples in one window, since the sample number is determined by both the window size and the sampling rate. A wide range of sampling rates are explored in WSHAR, varying from 1hz (Zhang, et al, 2014), 5hz (Alshurafa, et al, 2014), 6hz (Gjoreski & Gams, 2011a), 10hz (Nam & Park, 2013), 20hz (Wang, et al, 2018, Suto, et al, 2016, 33hz (Chernbumroong, et al, 2014), 50hz (Biswas, et al, 2015, Hassan, et al, 2018, 64Hz (Hammerla, et al, 2016), 100hz (Sani, et al, 2017), 120hz (Laudanski, et al, 2015), 126hz (Gupta & Dallas, 2014), 135hz (Dalton & ÓLaighin, 2013), 200hz (Yao, et al, 2017), 256hz (Chen, et al, 2014), and up to 800hz (Montalto, et al, 2015). Generally, higher sampling rates can catch more signal details but coupled with higher energy requirements and higher noise impact; lower sampling rates save considerable energy, but might omit certain relevant information, thus lower accuracy.…”