Refine
Year of publication
Document Type
- Conference Proceeding (57)
- Article (13)
- Doctoral Thesis (1)
- Other Publications (1)
Keywords
- AAL (3)
- Accelerometer (3)
- Accelerometer sensor (1)
- Accelerometers (2)
- Accessibility (1)
- Accessible Tourism (1)
- Ambient assisted living (2)
- Apnoe (1)
- Assisted living (1)
- Assistive systems (1)
Ballistocardiography (BCG) can be used to monitor heart rate activity. Besides, the accelerometer should have high sensitivity and minimal internal noise; a low-cost approach was taken into consideration. Several measurements have been executed to determine the optimal positioning of a sensor under the mattress to obtain a signal strong enough for further analysis. A prototype for an unobtrusive accelerometer-based measurement system has been developed and tested in a conventional bed without any specific extras. The influence of the human sleep position for the output accelerometer data was tested. The obtained results indicate the potential to capture BCG signals using accelerometers. The measurement system can detect heart rate in an unobtrusive form in the home environment.
Personalized remote healthcare monitoring is in continuous development due to the technology improvements of sensors and wearable electronic systems. A state of the art of research works on wearable sensors for healthcare applications is presented in this work. Furthermore, a state of the art of wearable devices, chest and wrist band and smartwatches available on the market for health and sport monitoring is presented in this paper. Many activity trackers are commercially available. The prices are continuously reducing and the performances are improving, but commercial devices do not provide raw data and are therefore not useful for research purposes.
The respiratory rate is a vital sign indicating breathing illness. It is necessary to analyze the mechanical oscillations of the patient's body arising from chest movements. An inappropriate holder on which the sensor is mounted, or an inappropriate sensor position is some of the external factors which should be minimized during signal registration. This paper considers using a non-invasive device placed under the bed mattress and evaluates the respiratory rate. The aim of the work is the development of an accelerometer sensor holder for this system. The normal and deep breathing signals were analyzed, corresponding to the relaxed state and when taking deep breaths. The evaluation criterion for the holder's model is its influence on the patient's respiratory signal amplitude for each state. As a result, we offer a non-invasive system of respiratory rate detection, including the mechanical component providing the most accurate values of mentioned respiratory rate.
This paper presents a bed system able to analyze a person’s movement, breathing and recognize the positions that the subject is lying on the bed during the night without any additional physical contact. The measurements are performed with sensors placed between the mattress and the bed-frame. An Intel Edison board was used as an endpoint that served as a communication node from the mesh network to external service. Two nodes and Intel Edison are attached to the bottom of the bed frame and they are connected to the sensors. First test results have indicated the potential of the proposed approach for the recognition of sleep positions with 83% of correct recognized positions.
This paper presents the goals, service design approach, and the results of the project “Accessible Tourism around Lake Constance”, which is currently run by different universities, industrial partners and selected hotels in Switzerland, Germany and Austria. In the 1st phase, interviews with different persons with disabilities and elderly persons have been conducted to identify the barriers and pains faced by tourists who want to spend their holidays in the region of Lake Constance as well as possible assistive technologies that help to overcome these barriers. The analysis of the interviews shows that one third of the pains and barriers are due to missing, insufficient, wrong or inaccessible information about the
accessibility of the accommodation, surroundings, and points of interests during the planning phase of the holidays. Digital assistive technologies hence play a
major role in bridging this information gap. In the 2nd phase so-called Hotel-Living-Labs (HLL) have been established where the identified assistive technologies
can be evaluated. Based on these HLLs an overall service for accessible holidays has been designed and developed. In the last phase, this service has been implemented
based on the HLLs as well as the identified assistive technologies and is currently field tested with tourists with disabilities from the three participated countries.
Das häusliche Umfeld kann vor allem für langfristiges Schlafmonitoring verwendet werden. Gute Patientenakzeptanz erfordert niedrige Nutzer- und Installationsbarrieren. Für die Installation zu Hause sind klassische PSG-Systeme aufgrund von ihrer Komplexität wenig passend. Ziel der Entwicklung ist die qualifizierte Erhebung von Parametern, die einerseits eine hinreichend gute Klassifikation von Schlafphasen erlauben und die andererseits durch nicht-invasive Methoden erfasst werden können.
Basierend auf einer Literaturstudie und der Maßgabe nicht-invasive Methoden zu nutzen, wurden folgende Parameter ausgewählt: Körperbewegung, Atmung und Herzschlag. Diese Parameter können nicht-invasiv durch Matratzendrucksensoren erfasst werden. Die Sensorknoten sind als ein Netz von Drucksensoren implementiert, die mit einem leistungsarmen und performanten Mikrocontroller verbunden sind. Alle Knoten sind über einen systemweiten Bus mit Adressarbitrierung verbunden. Der eingebettete Prozessor ist der Mesh-Netzwerk-Endpunkt, der die Netzwerkkonfiguration, Speicherung und Vorverarbeitung der Daten, externen Datenzugriff und Visualisierung ermöglicht.
Das System wurde getestet, indem Experimente durchgeführt wurden, die den Schlaf verschiedener gesunder junger Personen aufzeichneten. Die erhaltenen Ergebnisse bestätigen die Fähigkeit des Systems, Atemfrequenz und Körperbewegung zu erfassen. Ein wesentlicher Unterschied dieses Systems im Vergleich zu anderen Ansätzen ist die innovative Art, die Sensoren unter der Matratze zu platzieren. Diese Eigenschaft erleichtert die kontinuierliche Nutzung des Systems ohne Einfluss auf den gemeinsamen Schlafprozess.
Um Schlafverhalten langfristig zu untersuchen, wird ein Hardwaresystem mit niedrigen Installationsbarrieren für den Einsatz im häuslichen Umfeld. Erste Ergebnisse weisen auf das Potenzial hin, außer Körperbewegung und Atemfrequenz, auch Herzfrequenz erfassen zu können. Die Werte können weiter verbessert werden, wenn die Sensorabfragefrequenz erhöht wird. Nach der Weiterentwicklung des Systems, soll es mit dem Softwarealgorithmus für die Schlafphasenerkennung verbunden werden.
The process of restoring our body and brain from fatigue is directly depend-ing on the quality of sleep. It can be determined from the report of the sleep study results. Classification of sleep stages is the first step of this study and this includes the measurement of biovital data and its further processing.
In this work, the sleep analysis system is based on a hardware sensor net, namely a grid of 24 pressure sensors, supporting sleep phase recognition. In comparison to the leading standard, which is polysomnography, the proposed approach is a non-invasive system. It recognises respiration and body move-ment with only one type of low-cost pressure sensors forming a mesh archi-tecture. The nodes implement as a series of pressure sensors connected to a low-power and performant microcontroller. All nodes are connected via a system wide bus with address arbitration. The embedded processor is the mesh network endpoint that enables network configuration, storing and pre-processing of the data, external data access and visualization.
The system was tested by executing experiments recording the sleep of different healthy young subjects. The results obtained have indicated the po-tential to detect breathing rate and body movement. A major difference of this system in comparison to other approaches is the innovative way to place the sensors under the mattress. This characteristic facilitates the continuous using of the system without any influence on the common sleep process.
The recovery of our body and brain from fatigue directly depends on the quality of sleep, which can be determined from the results of a sleep study. The classification of sleep stages is the first step of this study and includes the measurement of vital data and their further processing. The non-invasive sleep analysis system is based on a hardware sensor network of 24 pressure sensors providing sleep phase detection. The pressure sensors are connected to an energy-efficient microcontroller via a system-wide bus. A significant difference between this system and other approaches is the innovative way in which the sensors are placed under the mattress. This feature facilitates the continuous use of the system without any noticeable influence on the sleeping person. The system was tested by conducting experiments that recorded the sleep of various healthy young people. Results indicate the potential to capture respiratory rate and body movement.