Title :
Evaluation of a wireless vital sensor for ubiquitous health monitoring systems
Author :
Inoue, Tadayuki ; Tsujioka, Tetsuo ; Nakajima, Shigeyoshi ; Hara, Shinsuke ; Nakamura, Hajime ; Takeuchi, Kazuhide
Author_Institution :
Grad. Sch. of Eng., Osaka City Univ., Osaka, Japan
Abstract :
Vital sensor and wireless information communication technologies play important roles in providing continuous health monitoring systems. The key elements required for the vital sensor device are its simplicity and accuracy, whereas those for the wireless communication tool are its connectivity and comfortability. For a commercially available wireless vital sensor with capability of measuring three-dimensional acceleration, electrocardiogram and body surface temperature, we conducted a clinical test for evaluating its accuracy and connectivity. The result of the clinical test revealed that the accuracy of the vital sensor was almost the same as that of the Holter monitor in term of electrocardiogram recording capability, but its wireless connectivity was much lower, that is, the average data loss rate was 0.22 for the data from all the subjects with variance of 0.025. In addition to the clinical test, we conducted an experiment on improving the wireless connectivity by receiver diversity in a patient room. The experimental result revealed that the average data loss rate, which was 0.041 for the use of a single receiver, was effectively reduced to 0.0023 only for the use of two antenna receivers.
Keywords :
biomedical communication; biosensors; diversity reception; electrocardiography; health care; medical signal processing; patient monitoring; radio receivers; receiving antennas; ubiquitous computing; wireless sensor networks; antenna receiver; body surface temperature; clinical test; continuous health monitoring system; data loss rate; electrocardiogram; patient room; receiver diversity; three-dimensional acceleration; ubiquitous health monitoring system; vital sensor device; wireless communication tool; wireless connectivity; wireless information communication; wireless vital sensor; Communication system security; Electrocardiography; Monitoring; Temperature measurement; Temperature sensors; Wireless communication; Wireless sensor networks;
Conference_Titel :
Robotic and Sensors Environments (ROSE), 2010 IEEE International Workshop on
Conference_Location :
Phoenix, AZ
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-7147-8
DOI :
10.1109/ROSE.2010.5675256