DocumentCode
25122
Title
Design and Evaluation of RFID Deployments in a Trauma Resuscitation Bay
Author
Parlak, Siddika ; Ayyer, Shriniwas ; Ying Yu Liu ; Marsic, Ivan
Author_Institution
Qualcomm Technol., Inc., Santa Clara, CA, USA
Volume
18
Issue
3
fYear
2014
fDate
May-14
Firstpage
1091
Lastpage
1097
Abstract
We examined configuring a radio frequency identification (RFID) equipment for the best object use detection in a trauma bay. Unlike prior work on RFID, we 1) optimized the accuracy of object use detection rather than just object detection; and 2) quantitatively assessed antenna placement while addressing issues specific to tag placement likely to occur in a trauma bay. Our design started with an analysis of the environment requirements and constraints. We designed several antenna setups with different number of components (RFID tags or antennas) and their orientations. Setups were evaluated under scenarios simulating a dynamic medical setting. We used three metrics with increasing complexity and bias: read rate, received signal strength indication distribution distance, and target application performance. Our experiments showed that antennas above the regions with high object density are most suitable for detecting object use. We explored tagging strategies for challenging objects so that sufficient readout rates are obtained for computing evaluation metrics. Among the metrics, distribution distance was correlated with target application performance, and also less biased and simpler to calculate, which made it an excellent metric for context-aware applications. We present experimental results obtained in the real trauma bay to validate our findings.
Keywords
antennas; biomedical equipment; injuries; medical computing; object detection; radiofrequency identification; ubiquitous computing; RFID equipment; computing evaluation metrics; context-aware applications; distribution distance; dynamic medical setting; high object density; quantitative assessed antenna placement; radiofrequency identification equipment; target application performance; trauma resuscitation bay; Accuracy; Antennas; Liquids; Measurement; Radiofrequency identification; Shape; Tagging; Object use detection; RFID; setup evaluation;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Biomedical and Health Informatics, IEEE Journal of
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
2168-2194
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/JBHI.2013.2283506
Filename
6609061
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