Works (3)

Updated: July 5th, 2023 15:38

2016 journal article

Low-Power Wearable Systems for Continuous Monitoring of Environment and Health for Chronic Respiratory Disease

IEEE Journal of Biomedical and Health Informatics, 20(5), 1251–1264.

By: J. Dieffenderfer n, H. Goodell n, S. Mills n, M. McKnight n, S. Yao n, F. Lin n, E. Beppler n, B. Bent n ...

author keywords: Environmental and physiological sensing; wearable asthma monitoring
MeSH headings : Asthma / diagnosis; Chronic Disease; Electric Impedance; Electrocardiography; Equipment Design; Humans; Monitoring, Ambulatory / instrumentation; Monitoring, Ambulatory / methods; Photoplethysmography; Skin / physiopathology; Spirometry
TL;DR: The preliminary efforts to achieve a submilliwatt system ultimately powered by the energy harvested from thermal radiation and motion of the body are described with the primary contributions being an ultralow-power ozone sensor, an volatile organic compounds sensor, spirometer, and the integration of these and other sensors in a multimodal sensing platform. (via Semantic Scholar)
UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
7. Affordable and Clean Energy (OpenAlex)
Sources: Web Of Science, NC State University Libraries, Crossref
Added: August 6, 2018

2015 conference paper

Textile sensor system for electrocardiogram monitoring

2015 Virtual Conference on Application of Commercial Sensors.

By: L. Gonzales, K. Walker*, K. Keller, D. Beckman, H. Goodell*, G. Wright n, C. Rhone n, A. Emery n, R. Gupta*

TL;DR: A Bluetooth-based, dry electrode electrocardiogram monitoring system seamlessly integrated into a T-shirt that used three dry silver-based electrodes to collect the ECG signal and streamed the resulting signal to an Android smartphone for analysis. (via Semantic Scholar)
Sources: NC State University Libraries, NC State University Libraries
Added: August 6, 2018

2015 conference paper

Wearable wireless sensors for chronic respiratory disease monitoring

2015 IEEE 12th International Conference on Wearable and Implantable Body Sensor Networks (BSN).

By: J. Dieffenderfer n, H. Goodell n, B. Bent n, E. Beppler n, R. Jayakumar n, M. Yokus n, J. Jur n, A. Bozkurt n, D. Peden*

TL;DR: A wearable sensor system consisting of a wristband and chest patch to enable the correlation of individual environmental exposure to health response for understanding impacts of ozone on chronic asthma conditions is presented. (via Semantic Scholar)
Source: NC State University Libraries
Added: August 6, 2018

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