DocumentCode
110536
Title
Wireless Body Area Network Node Localization Using Small-Scale Spatial Information
Author
Lo, Guo-Qiang ; Gonzalez-Valenzuela, S. ; Leung, Victor C. M.
Author_Institution
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Univ. of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada
Volume
17
Issue
3
fYear
2013
fDate
May-13
Firstpage
715
Lastpage
726
Abstract
We present a new scheme to automatically identify the locations of wearable sensor nodes in a wireless body area network (WBAN). Instantaneous atmospheric air pressure readings are compared to map nodes in physical space. This enhancement enables unassisted sensor node placement, providing a practical solution to obtain and continuously monitor node locations without anchor nodes or beacons. To validate this localization scheme, a statistical analysis is conducted on a set of air pressure sensors and a prototype WBAN to examine the performance and limitations. Based on a 60 cm separation between nodes, indicative of the expected separation between limbs and placement positions along a patient´s body, the measurements consistently exceeded p -value reliability within a 95% confidence interval. We also present and experimentally demonstrate an enhancement aiming to reduce false-positive (Type I) errors in conventional accelerometer-based on-body fall detection schemes. Our statistical analysis has shown that by continuously monitoring the patient´s limb positions, the WBAN would be better able to discriminate “fall-like” motions from actual falls.
Keywords
biomedical telemetry; body sensor networks; patient monitoring; statistical analysis; WBAN node localization; accelerometer based on body fall detection scheme; air pressure sensors; automatic WBAN node location identification; distance 60 cm; fall like motions; instantaneous atmospheric air pressure readings; patient limb positions; small scale spatial information; statistical analysis; unassisted sensor node placement; wearable sensor nodes; wireless body area network; Accuracy; Atmospheric measurements; Monitoring; Position measurement; Pressure measurement; Reliability; Wireless sensor networks; Atmospheric air pressure; fall detection; health monitoring; limb tracking; m-health; node identification; sensor placement; wearable sensors; wireless body area network (WBAN);
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Biomedical and Health Informatics, IEEE Journal of
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
2168-2194
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/JBHI.2012.2237178
Filename
6400207
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