50 research outputs found

    MsWH: A multi-sensory hardware platform for capturing and analyzing physiological emotional signals

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    This paper presents a new physiological signal acquisition multi-sensory platform for emotion detection: Multi-sensor Wearable Headband (MsWH). The system is capable of recording and analyzing five different physiological signals: skin temperature, blood oxygen saturation, heart rate (and its variation), movement/position of the user (more specifically of his/her head) and electrodermal activity/bioimpedance. The measurement system is complemented by a porthole camera positioned in such a way that the viewing area remains constant. Thus, the user''s face will remain centered regardless of its position and movement, increasing the accuracy of facial expression recognition algorithms. This work specifies the technical characteristics of the developed device, paying special attention to both the hardware used (sensors, conditioning, microprocessors, connections) and the software, which is optimized for accurate and massive data acquisition. Although the information can be partially processed inside the device itself, the system is capable of sending information via Wi-Fi, with a very high data transfer rate, in case external processing is required. The most important features of the developed platform have been compared with those of a proven wearable device, namely the Empatica E4 wristband, in those measurements in which this is possible

    Digital Sensing Systems for Electromyography

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    Surface electromyogram (EMG) signals find diverse applications in movement rehabilitation and human-computer interfacing. For instance, future advanced prostheses, which use artificial intelligence, will require EMG signals recorded from several sites on the forearm. This requirement will entail complex wiring and data handling. We present the design and evaluation of a bespoke EMG sensing system that addresses the above challenges, enables distributed signal processing, and balances local versus global power consumption. Additionally, the proposed EMG system enables the recording and simultaneous analysis of skin-sensor impedance, needed to ensure signal fidelity. We evaluated the proposed sensing system in three experiments, namely, monitoring muscle fatigue, real-time skin-sensor impedance measurement, and control of a myoelectric computer interface. The proposed system offers comparable signal acquisition characteristics to that achieved by a clinically-approved product. It will serve and integrate future myoelectric technology better via enabling distributed machine learning and improving the signal transmission efficiency

    Multimodal Wearable Sensors for Human-Machine Interfaces

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    Certain areas of the body, such as the hands, eyes and organs of speech production, provide high-bandwidth information channels from the conscious mind to the outside world. The objective of this research was to develop an innovative wearable sensor device that records signals from these areas more conveniently than has previously been possible, so that they can be harnessed for communication. A novel bioelectrical and biomechanical sensing device, the wearable endogenous biosignal sensor (WEBS), was developed and tested in various communication and clinical measurement applications. One ground-breaking feature of the WEBS system is that it digitises biopotentials almost at the point of measurement. Its electrode connects directly to a high-resolution analog-to-digital converter. A second major advance is that, unlike previous active biopotential electrodes, the WEBS electrode connects to a shared data bus, allowing a large or small number of them to work together with relatively few physical interconnections. Another unique feature is its ability to switch dynamically between recording and signal source modes. An accelerometer within the device captures real-time information about its physical movement, not only facilitating the measurement of biomechanical signals of interest, but also allowing motion artefacts in the bioelectrical signal to be detected. Each of these innovative features has potentially far-reaching implications in biopotential measurement, both in clinical recording and in other applications. Weighing under 0.45 g and being remarkably low-cost, the WEBS is ideally suited for integration into disposable electrodes. Several such devices can be combined to form an inexpensive digital body sensor network, with shorter set-up time than conventional equipment, more flexible topology, and fewer physical interconnections. One phase of this study evaluated areas of the body as communication channels. The throat was selected for detailed study since it yields a range of voluntarily controllable signals, including laryngeal vibrations and gross movements associated with vocal tract articulation. A WEBS device recorded these signals and several novel methods of human-to-machine communication were demonstrated. To evaluate the performance of the WEBS system, recordings were validated against a high-end biopotential recording system for a number of biopotential signal types. To demonstrate an application for use by a clinician, the WEBS system was used to record 12‑lead electrocardiogram with augmented mechanical movement information

    A high frame rate wearable EIT system using active electrode ASICs for lung respiration and heart rate monitoring

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    A high specification, wearable, electrical impedance tomography (EIT) system with 32 active electrodes is presented. Each electrode has an application specific integrated circuit (ASIC) mounted on a flexible printed circuit board, which is then wrapped inside a disposable fabric cover containing silver-coated electrodes to form the wearable belt. It is connected to a central hub that operates all the 32 ASICs. Each ASIC comprises a high- performance current driver capable of up to 6 mAp−p output, a voltage buffer for EIT and heart rate signal recording as well as contact impedance monitoring, and a sensor buffer that provides multi-parameter sensing. The ASIC was designed in a CMOS 0.35-μm high-voltage process technology. It operates from ±9-V power supplies and occupies a total die area of 3.9 mm2. The EIT system has a bandwidth of 500 kHz and employs two parallel data acquisition channels to achieve a frame rate of 107 frames/s, the fastest wearable EIT system reported to date. Measured results show that the system has a measurement accuracy of 98.88% and a minimum EIT detectability of 0.86 Q/frame. Its successful operation in capturing EIT lung respiration and heart rate biosignals from a volunteer is demonstrated

    A high frame rate wearable EIT system using active electrode ASICs for lung respiration and heart rate monitoring

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    A high specification, wearable, electrical impedance tomography (EIT) system with 32 active electrodes is presented. Each electrode has an application specific integrated circuit (ASIC) mounted on a flexible printed circuit board, which is then wrapped inside a disposable fabric cover containing silver-coated electrodes to form the wearable belt. It is connected to a central hub that operates all the 32 ASICs. Each ASIC comprises a high- performance current driver capable of up to 6 mAp−p output, a voltage buffer for EIT and heart rate signal recording as well as contact impedance monitoring, and a sensor buffer that provides multi-parameter sensing. The ASIC was designed in a CMOS 0.35-μm high-voltage process technology. It operates from ±9-V power supplies and occupies a total die area of 3.9 mm2. The EIT system has a bandwidth of 500 kHz and employs two parallel data acquisition channels to achieve a frame rate of 107 frames/s, the fastest wearable EIT system reported to date. Measured results show that the system has a measurement accuracy of 98.88% and a minimum EIT detectability of 0.86 Q/frame. Its successful operation in capturing EIT lung respiration and heart rate biosignals from a volunteer is demonstrated

    A Biomechanical and Physiological Signal Monitoring System for Four Degrees of Upper Limb Movement

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    A lack of adherence to prescribed physical therapy regimens in improper healing results in poor outcomes for those affected by musculoskeletal disorders (MSDs) of the upper limb. Societal and psychological barriers to proper adherence can be addressed through the system presented in this work consisting of the following components: an ambulatory biosignal acquisition sleeve, an electromyography (EMG) based motion repetition detection algorithm, and the design of a compatible capacitive EMG acquisition module. The biosignal acquisition sleeve was untethered, unobtrusive to motion, contained only modular components, and collected biomechanical and physiological sensor data to form full motion profiles of the following four degrees of freedom: elbow flexion—extension, forearm pronation—supination, wrist flexion—extension, and ulnar--radial deviation. The piloted sleeve simultaneously collected data from four inertial sensors, two electromyography (EMG) sensors and a flex-bend sensor. A visualization application was developed to present the information in a manner meaningful to the user. As well, an EMG based motion repetition detector was developed for use within the system. It was validated using an existing database of 23 subjects with varying musculoskeletal health, achieving a success rate of 95.43%. This algorithm was modified for use with the sleeve, resulting in a 95% success rate. An electrode and analog front end module was proposed, relying on unique material structures and low-noise, precision sensing techniques. The system prototype presented a resource-conscious tool for multi-modality tracking of elbow, forearm, and wrist motion, which could eventually be integrated into upper limb MSD rehabilitation

    Enabling human physiological sensing by leveraging intelligent head-worn wearable systems

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    This thesis explores the challenges of enabling human physiological sensing by leveraging head-worn wearable computer systems. In particular, we want to answer a fundamental question, i.e., could we leverage head-worn wearables to enable accurate and socially-acceptable solutions to improve human healthcare and prevent life-threatening conditions in our daily lives? To that end, we will study the techniques that utilise the unique advantages of wearable computers to (1) facilitate new sensing capabilities to capture various biosignals from the brain, the eyes, facial muscles, sweat glands, and blood vessels, (2) address motion artefacts and environmental noise in real-time with signal processing algorithms and hardware design techniques, and (3) enable long-term, high-fidelity biosignal monitoring with efficient on-chip intelligence and pattern-driven compressive sensing algorithms. We first demonstrate the ability to capture the activities of the user's brain, eyes, facial muscles, and sweat glands by proposing WAKE, a novel behind-the-ear biosignal sensing wearable. By studying the human anatomy in the ear area, we propose a wearable design to capture brain waves (EEG), eye movements (EOG), facial muscle contractions (EMG), and sweat gland activities (EDA) with a minimal number of sensors. Furthermore, we introduce a Three-fold Cascaded Amplifying (3CA) technique and signal processing algorithms to tame the motion artefacts and environmental noises for capturing high-fidelity signals in real time. We devise a machine-learning model based on the captured signals to detect microsleep with a high temporal resolution. Second, we will discuss our work on developing an efficient Pattern-dRiven Compressive Sensing framework (PROS) to enable long-term biosignal monitoring on low-power wearables. The system introduces tiny on-chip pattern recognition primitives (TinyPR) and a novel pattern-driven compressive sensing technique (PDCS) that exploits the sparsity of biosignals. They provide the ability to capture high-fidelity biosignals with an ultra-low power footprint. This development will unlock long-term healthcare applications on wearable computers, such as epileptic seizure monitoring, microsleep detection, etc. These applications were previously impractical on energy and resource-constrained wearable computers due to the limited battery lifetime, slow response rate, and inadequate biosignal quality. Finally, we will further explore the possibility of capturing the activities of a blood vessel (i.e., superficial temporal artery) lying deep inside the user's ear using an ear-worn wearable computer. The captured optical pulse signals (PPG) are used to develop a frequent and comfortable blood pressure monitoring system called eBP. In contrast to existing devices, eBP introduces a novel in-ear wearable system design and algorithms to eliminate the need to block the blood flow inside the ear, alleviating the user's discomfort

    Enabling Wearable Hemodynamic Monitoring Using Multimodal Cardiomechanical Sensing Systems

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    Hemodynamic parameters such as blood pressure and stroke volume are instrumental to understanding the pathogenesis of cardiovascular disease. Unfortunately, the monitoring of these hemodynamic parameters is still limited to in-clinic measurements and cumbersome hardware precludes convenient, ubiquitous use. To address this burden, in this work, we explore seismocardiogram-based wearable multimodal sensing techniques to estimate blood pressure and stroke volume. First, the performance of a multimodal, wrist-worn device capable of obtaining noninvasive pulse transit time measurements is used to estimate blood pressure in an unsupervised, at-home setting. Second, the feasibility of this wrist-worn device is comprehensively evaluated in a diverse and medically underserved population over the course of several perturbations used to modulate blood pressure through different pathways. Finally, the ability of wearable signals—acquired from a custom chest-worn biosensor—to noninvasively quantify stroke volume in patients with congenital heart disease is examined in a hospital setting. Collectively, this work demonstrates the advancements necessary towards enabling noninvasive, longitudinal, and accurate measurements of these hemodynamic parameters in remote settings, which offers to improve health equity and disease monitoring in low-resource settings.Ph.D

    Wearable electroencephalography for long-term monitoring and diagnostic purposes

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    Truly Wearable EEG (WEEG) can be considered as the future of ambulatory EEG units, which are the current standard for long-term EEG monitoring. Replacing these short lifetime, bulky units with long-lasting, miniature and wearable devices that can be easily worn by patients will result in more EEG data being collected for extended monitoring periods. This thesis presents three new fabricated systems, in the form of Application Specific Integrated Circuits (ASICs), to aid the diagnosis of epilepsy and sleep disorders by detecting specific clinically important EEG events on the sensor node, while discarding background activity. The power consumption of the WEEG monitoring device incorporating these systems can be reduced since the transmitter, which is the dominating element in terms of power consumption, will only become active based on the output of these systems. Candidate interictal activity is identified by the developed analog-based interictal spike selection system-on-chip (SoC), using an approximation of the Continuous Wavelet Transform (CWT), as a bandpass filter, and thresholding. The spike selection SoC is fabricated in a 0.35 μm CMOS process and consumes 950 nW. Experimental results reveal that the SoC is able to identify 87% of interictal spikes correctly while only transmitting 45% of the data. Sections of EEG data containing likely ictal activity are detected by an analog seizure selection SoC using the low complexity line length feature. This SoC is fabricated in a 0.18 μm CMOS technology and consumes 1.14 μW. Based on experimental results, the fabricated SoC is able to correctly detect 83% of seizure episodes while transmitting 52% of the overall EEG data. A single-channel analog-based sleep spindle detection SoC is developed to aid the diagnosis of sleep disorders by detecting sleep spindles, which are characteristic events of sleep. The system identifies spindle events by monitoring abrupt changes in the input EEG. An approximation of the median frequency calculation, incorporated as part of the system, allows for non-spindle activity incorrectly identified by the system as sleep spindles to be discarded. The sleep spindle detection SoC is fabricated in a 0.18 μm CMOS technology, consuming only 515 nW. The SoC achieves a sensitivity and specificity of 71.5% and 98% respectively.Open Acces
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