Affiliation:
1. Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, AL
2. Department of Psychology, State University of New York at Buffalo, Buffalo, NY
Abstract
Abstract
Introduction
Wearable sensors may be used for the assessment of behavioral manifestations of cigarette smoking under natural conditions. This paper introduces a new camera-based sensor system to monitor smoking behavior. The goals of this study were (1) identification of the best position of sensor placement on the body and (2) feasibility evaluation of the sensor as a free-living smoking-monitoring tool.
Methods
A sensor system was developed with a 5MP camera that captured images every second for continuously up to 26 hours. Five on-body locations were tested for the selection of sensor placement. A feasibility study was then performed on 10 smokers to monitor full-day smoking under free-living conditions. Captured images were manually annotated to obtain behavioral metrics of smoking including smoking frequency, smoking environment, and puffs per cigarette. The smoking environment and puff counts captured by the camera were compared with self-reported smoking.
Results
A camera located on the eyeglass temple produced the maximum number of images of smoking and the minimal number of blurry or overexposed images (53.9%, 4.19%, and 0.93% of total captured, respectively). During free-living conditions, 286,245 images were captured with a mean (±standard deviation) duration of sensor wear of 647(±74) minutes/participant. Image annotation identified consumption of 5(±2.3) cigarettes/participant, 3.1(±1.1) cigarettes/participant indoors, 1.9(±0.9) cigarettes/participant outdoors, and 9.02(±2.5) puffs/cigarette. Statistical tests found significant differences between manual annotations and self-reported smoking environment or puff counts.
Conclusions
A wearable camera-based sensor may facilitate objective monitoring of cigarette smoking, categorization of smoking environments, and identification of behavioral metrics of smoking in free-living conditions.
Implications
The proposed camera-based sensor system can be employed to examine cigarette smoking under free-living conditions. Smokers may accept this unobtrusive sensor for extended wear, as the sensor would not restrict the natural pattern of smoking or daily activities, nor would it require any active participation from a person except wearing it. Critical metrics of smoking behavior, such as the smoking environment and puff counts obtained from this sensor, may generate important information for smoking interventions.
Funder
National Institute on Drug Abuse
National Institutes of Health
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Subject
Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health
Cited by
10 articles.
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