Modular Open-Core System for Collection and Near Real-Time Processing of High-Resolution Data from Wearable Sensors
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Published:2023-09-04
Issue:5
Volume:6
Page:79
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ISSN:2571-5577
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Container-title:Applied System Innovation
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language:en
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Short-container-title:ASI
Author:
Temple Dorota S.1, Hegarty-Craver Meghan1ORCID, Gaur Pooja1ORCID, Boyce Matthew D.1, Holt Jonathan R.1ORCID, Preble Edward A.1ORCID, Eckhoff Randall P.1, Davis-Wilson Hope1, Walls Howard J.1, Dausch David E.1, Blackston Matthew A.2
Affiliation:
1. RTI International, Research Triangle Park, NC 27709, USA 2. Two Six Technologies, Arlington, VA 22203, USA
Abstract
Wearable devices, such as smartwatches integrating heart rate and activity sensors, have the potential to transform health monitoring by enabling continuous, near real-time data collection and analytics. In this paper, we present a novel modular architecture for collecting and end-to-end processing of high-resolution signals from wearable sensors. The system obtains minimally processed data directly from the smartwatch and further processes and analyzes the data stream without transmitting it to the device vendor cloud. The standalone operation is made possible by a software stack that provides data cleaning, extraction of physiological metrics, and standardization of the metrics to enable person-to-person and rest-to-activity comparisons. To illustrate the operation of the system, we present examples of datasets from volunteers wearing Garmin Fenix smartwatches for several weeks in free-living conditions. As collected, the datasets contain time series of each interbeat interval and the respiration rate, blood oxygen saturation, and step count every 1 min. From the high-resolution datasets, we extract heart rate variability metrics, which are a source of information about the heart’s response to external stressors. These biomarkers can be used for the early detection of a range of diseases and the assessment of physical and mental performance of the individual. The data collection and analytics system has the potential to broaden the use of smartwatches in continuous near to real-time monitoring of health and well-being.
Funder
Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency
Subject
Artificial Intelligence,Applied Mathematics,Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering,Human-Computer Interaction,Information Systems,Control and Systems Engineering
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