Title :
An Ultra Low Energy Biomedical Signal Processing System Operating at Near-Threshold
Author :
Hulzink, J. ; Konijnenburg, M. ; Ashouei, M. ; Breeschoten, A. ; Berset, T. ; Huisken, J. ; Stuyt, J. ; de Groot, H. ; Barat, F. ; David, J. ; Van Ginderdeuren, J.
Author_Institution :
Hoist Centre/imec, Eindhoven, Netherlands
Abstract :
This paper presents a voltage-scalable digital signal processing system designed for the use in a wireless sensor node (WSN) for ambulatory monitoring of biomedical signals. To fulfill the requirements of ambulatory monitoring, power consumption, which directly translates to the WSN battery lifetime and size, must be kept as low as possible. The proposed processing platform is an event-driven system with resources to run applications with different degrees of complexity in an energy-aware way. The architecture uses effective system partitioning to enable duty cycling, single instruction multiple data (SIMD) instructions, power gating, voltage scaling, multiple clock domains, multiple voltage domains, and extensive clock gating. It provides an alternative processing platform where the power and performance can be scaled to adapt to the application need. A case study on a continuous wavelet transform (CWT)-based heart-beat detection shows that the platform not only preserves the sensitivity and positive predictivity of the algorithm but also achieves the lowest energy/sample for ElectroCardioGram (ECG) heart-beat detection publicly reported today.
Keywords :
electrocardiography; medical signal detection; medical signal processing; patient monitoring; wavelet transforms; wireless sensor networks; ECG; ambulatory monitoring; battery lifetime; continuous wavelet transform; duty cycling; electrocardiogram heart-beat detection; event-driven system; extensive clock gating; heart-beat detection; multiple clock domains; multiple voltage domains; near-threshold operation; power consumption; power gating; single instruction multiple data instructions; ultralow energy biomedical signal processing system; voltage scaling; voltage-scalable digital signal processing system; wireless sensor node; Biomedical signal processing; Electrocardiography; Low power electronics; Low voltage; Wireless sensor networks; Biomedical signal processing; ElectroCardioGram (ECG) processing; low power; low voltage; multi-power domain; multi-voltage domain; near-threshold design;
Journal_Title :
Biomedical Circuits and Systems, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TBCAS.2011.2176726