Wearable sensors bring new benefits to continuous medical monitoring, real time physical activity assessment, baby monitoring and industrial applications
Abstract
Purpose
– The purpose of this paper is to review the recent advancements in the development of wearable sensors which can continuously monitor critical medical, assess athletic activity, watch babies and serve industrial applications.
Design/methodology/approach
– The paper presents an in-depth review of a number of developments in wearable sensing and monitoring technologies for medical, athletic and industrial applications. Researchers and companies around the world were contacted to discuss their direction and progress in this field of medical condition and industrial monitoring, as well as discussions with medical personnel on the perceived benefits of such technology.
Findings
– Dramatic progress is being made in continuous monitoring of many important body functions that indicate critical medical conditions that can be life-threatening, contribute to blindness or access activity. In the industrial arena, wearable devices bring remote monitoring to a new level.
Practical implications
– Doctors will be able to replace one-off tests with continuous monitoring that provides a much better continuous real-time “view” into the patient’s conditions. Wearable monitors will help provide much better medical care in the future. Industrial managers and others will be able to monitor and supervise remotely.
Originality/value
– An expert insight into advancements in medical condition monitoring that replaces the one-time “finger prick” type testing only performed in the doctor’s office. It is also a look at how wearable monitoring is greatly improved and serving athletics, the industry and parents.
Subject
Electrical and Electronic Engineering,Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering
Reference6 articles.
1. Beiderman, Y.
,
Blumenberg, R.
,
Rabani, N.
,
Teicher, M.
,
Garcia, J.
,
Mico, V.
and
Zalevsky, Z.
(2011), “Demonstration of remote optical measurement configuration that correlates to glucose concentration in blood”,
The Optical Society, Biomedical Optics Express
, Vol. 2 No. 4, pp. 858-870. 2. Bloss, R.
(2011), “Electronic sensor ‘in your eye’ helps in treating glaucoma”,
Sensor Review
, Vol. 31 No. 3, pp. 293-294. 3. Bloss, R.
(2012), “Mouth sensor helps researchers track concussions”,
Sensor Review
, Vol. 32 No. 3, pp. 199-202. 4. Boland, S.
,
Khan, U.
,
Backes, C.
,
O’Neil, A.
,
McAuley, J.
,
Duane, S.
,
Shanker, R.
,
Liu, Y.
,
Jurewicz, I.
,
Dalton, A.
and
Coleman, J.
(2014), “Sensitive, high-strain, high-rate, bodily motion sensors based on graphene-rubber composites”,
American Chemical Society NANO
, 8 August. 5. Lee, S.
,
Lee, K.
,
Lee, C.
,
Liu, G.
and
Zhong, Z.
(2012), “Flexible and transparent all-graphene circuits for quaternary digital modulations”,
Nature Communications
, Vol. 3.
Cited by
29 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献
|
|