1,844 research outputs found
Smart vest for respiratory rate monitoring of COPD patients based on non-contact capacitive sensing
In this paper, a first approach to the design of a portable device for non-contact monitoring
of respiratory rate by capacitive sensing is presented. The sensing system is integrated into a smart
vest for an untethered, low-cost and comfortable breathing monitoring of Chronic Obstructive
Pulmonary Disease (COPD) patients during the rest period between respiratory rehabilitation
exercises at home. To provide an extensible solution to the remote monitoring using this sensor and
other devices, the design and preliminary development of an e-Health platform based on the Internet
of Medical Things (IoMT) paradigm is also presented. In order to validate the proposed solution,
two quasi-experimental studies have been developed, comparing the estimations with respect to the
golden standard. In a first study with healthy subjects, the mean value of the respiratory rate error,
the standard deviation of the error and the correlation coefficient were 0.01 breaths per minute (bpm),
0.97 bpm and 0.995 (p < 0.00001), respectively. In a second study with COPD patients, the values
were -0.14 bpm, 0.28 bpm and 0.9988 (p < 0.0000001), respectively. The results for the rest period
show the technical and functional feasibility of the prototype and serve as a preliminary validation of
the device for respiratory rate monitoring of patients with COPD.Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación PI15/00306Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación DTS15/00195Junta de AndalucÃa PI-0010-2013Junta de AndalucÃa PI-0041-2014Junta de AndalucÃa PIN-0394-201
Implementing and Evaluating a Wireless Body Sensor System for Automated Physiological Data Acquisition at Home
Advances in embedded devices and wireless sensor networks have resulted in
new and inexpensive health care solutions. This paper describes the
implementation and the evaluation of a wireless body sensor system that
monitors human physiological data at home. Specifically, a waist-mounted
triaxial accelerometer unit is used to record human movements. Sampled data are
transmitted using an IEEE 802.15.4 wireless transceiver to a data logger unit.
The wearable sensor unit is light, small, and consumes low energy, which allows
for inexpensive and unobtrusive monitoring during normal daily activities at
home. The acceleration measurement tests show that it is possible to classify
different human motion through the acceleration reading. The 802.15.4 wireless
signal quality is also tested in typical home scenarios. Measurement results
show that even with interference from nearby IEEE 802.11 signals and microwave
ovens, the data delivery performance is satisfactory and can be improved by
selecting an appropriate channel. Moreover, we found that the wireless signal
can be attenuated by housing materials, home appliances, and even plants.
Therefore, the deployment of wireless body sensor systems at home needs to take
all these factors into consideration.Comment: 15 page
Capacitor Mismatch Calibration Technique to Improve the SFDR of 14-Bit SAR ADC
This paper presents mismatch calibration technique to improve the SFDR in a 14-bit successive approximation register (SAR) analog-to-digital converter (ADC) for wearable electronics application. Behavioral Monte-Carlo simulations are applied to demonstrate the effect of the proposed method where no complex digital calibration algorithm or auxiliary calibration DAC needed. Simulation results show that with a mismatch error typical of modern technology, the SFDR is enhanced by more than 20 dB with the proposed technique for a 14-bit SAR ADC
Human Body–Electrode Interfaces for Wide-Frequency Sensing and Communication: A Review
Several on-body sensing and communication applications use electrodes in contact with the human body. Body–electrode interfaces in these cases act as a transducer, converting ionic current in the body to electronic current in the sensing and communication circuits and vice versa. An ideal body–electrode interface should have the characteristics of an electrical short, i.e., the transfer of ionic currents and electronic currents across the interface should happen without any hindrance. However, practical body–electrode interfaces often have definite impedances and potentials that hinder the free flow of currents, affecting the application’s performance. Minimizing the impact of body–electrode interfaces on the application’s performance requires one to understand the physics of such interfaces, how it distorts the signals passing through it, and how the interface-induced signal degradations affect the applications. Our work deals with reviewing these elements in the context of biopotential sensing and human body communication
Bioelectronic Sensor Nodes for Internet of Bodies
Energy-efficient sensing with Physically-secure communication for bio-sensors
on, around and within the Human Body is a major area of research today for
development of low-cost healthcare, enabling continuous monitoring and/or
secure, perpetual operation. These devices, when used as a network of nodes
form the Internet of Bodies (IoB), which poses certain challenges including
stringent resource constraints (power/area/computation/memory), simultaneous
sensing and communication, and security vulnerabilities as evidenced by the DHS
and FDA advisories. One other major challenge is to find an efficient on-body
energy harvesting method to support the sensing, communication, and security
sub-modules. Due to the limitations in the harvested amount of energy, we
require reduction of energy consumed per unit information, making the use of
in-sensor analytics/processing imperative. In this paper, we review the
challenges and opportunities in low-power sensing, processing and
communication, with possible powering modalities for future bio-sensor nodes.
Specifically, we analyze, compare and contrast (a) different sensing mechanisms
such as voltage/current domain vs time-domain, (b) low-power, secure
communication modalities including wireless techniques and human-body
communication, and (c) different powering techniques for both wearable devices
and implants.Comment: 30 pages, 5 Figures. This is a pre-print version of the article which
has been accepted for Publication in Volume 25 of the Annual Review of
Biomedical Engineering (2023). Only Personal Use is Permitte
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