Reprint

Low-power Wearable Healthcare Sensors

Edited by
August 2020
146 pages
  • ISBN978-3-03936-479-4 (Hardback)
  • ISBN978-3-03936-480-0 (PDF)

This book is a reprint of the Special Issue Low-power Wearable Healthcare Sensors that was published in

Computer Science & Mathematics
Engineering
Physical Sciences
Summary

Advances in technology have produced a range of on-body sensors and smartwatches that can be used to monitor a wearer’s health with the objective to keep the user healthy. However, the real potential of such devices not only lies in monitoring but also in interactive communication with expert-system-based cloud services to offer personalized and real-time healthcare advice that will enable the user to manage their health and, over time, to reduce expensive hospital admissions. To meet this goal, the research challenges for the next generation of wearable healthcare devices include the need to offer a wide range of sensing, computing, communication, and human–computer interaction methods, all within a tiny device with limited resources and electrical power. This Special Issue presents a collection of six papers on a wide range of research developments that highlight the specific challenges in creating the next generation of low-power wearable healthcare sensors.

Format
  • Hardback
License
© 2020 by the authors; CC BY-NC-ND license
Keywords
biological neural networks; biosensors; neural engineering; digital circuits; field programmable gate arrays; principal component analysis; integrated circuits design; smart wearables; Internet of Wearables; Internet of Things; CMOS Electrochemical Sensing; Flexible Technologies; Hybrid Integration Technologies; joint angular kinematics; human motion analysis; RGB-D cameras; polymer optical fiber; inertial measurement units; e-health environment; sensor applications; patient monitoring; medical IoT sensor nodes; low-power; accuracy; IoT platforms; insulin delivery; wearable system; closed-loop; embedded platform; wearable; low-power; embedded; task scheduler; healthcare; n/a