Saturday, May 18, 2024
ADVT 
Interesting

Indian-American Trio Creates System To Monitor Vital Signs

Darpan News Desk IANS, 07 Apr, 2015 11:45 AM
    Indian-American researchers from Rice University have created a touch-free system that uses a video camera to monitor the vital signs of patients just by looking at their faces.
     
    The team of graduate student Mayank Kumar and professors Ashok Veeraraghavan and Ashutosh Sabharwal created the system that will let doctors diagnose patients from a distance with special attention paid to those in low-resource settings.
     
    The technique, called DistancePPG, can measure a patient's pulse and breathing just by analysing the changes in one's skin colour over time.
     
    Where other camera-based systems have been challenged by low-light conditions, dark skin tones and movement, DistancePPG relies on algorithms that correct for those variables.
     
    "DistancePPG will be particularly helpful to monitor premature infants for whom blood pressure cuffs or wired probes can pose a threat," said Mayank Kumar, the project's lead graduate researcher.
     
    The wires monitor babies' pulses and heart rate. 
     
    "The wires are not a problem. The problem is that the babies would roll or their mothers need to take care of them and the wires are taken off and put back on," Mayank Kumar said.
     
    That could potentially damage the infants' delicate skin. The existing techniques worked fine in bright rooms but there were three challenges.
     
    The first was the technique's difficulty in detecting colour change in darker skin tones. Second, the light was not always bright enough. The third and perhaps hardest problem was that patients sometimes move.
     
    The Rice team solved these challenges by adding a method to average skin-colour change signals from different areas of the face and an algorithm to track a subject's nose, eyes, mouth and whole face.
     
    "Our key finding was that the strength of the skin-colour change signal is different in different regions of the face, so we developed a weighted-averaging algorithm," Mayank Kumar explained.
     
    It improved the accuracy of derived vital signs, rapidly expanding the scope, viability, reach and utility of camera-based vital-sign monitoring.
     
    By incorporating tracking to compensate for movement -- even a smile -- DistancePPG perceived a pulse rate to within one beat per minute, even for diverse skin tones under varied lighting conditions.
     
    According to researchers, they expect the software to find its way to mobile phones, tablets and computers so people can reliably measure their own vital signs whenever and wherever they choose.
     
    The research appeared in the journal Biomedical Optics Express.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    VIDEO: Flying High! Bride Makes Magical Entry With The All-New Flying Veil Trend

    VIDEO: Flying High! Bride Makes Magical Entry With The All-New Flying Veil Trend
    In a 43-second clip, which had collected over 2.5 million views at the time of writing, multiple women wait for the magical white veil that drops elegantly on them.

    VIDEO: Flying High! Bride Makes Magical Entry With The All-New Flying Veil Trend

    Wives Beware! Hubbies Do Find Moms-In-Law Gorgeous

    Wives Beware! Hubbies Do Find Moms-In-Law Gorgeous
    This may well sweep many an Indian husband off his feet -- and evoke jealousy among some spouses -- but a British survey has found that several married men felt their mothers-in-law were more attractive than their wives.

    Wives Beware! Hubbies Do Find Moms-In-Law Gorgeous

    Show Porn In Classroom, Says Danish Professor

    Show Porn In Classroom, Says Danish Professor
    While educationists the world over debate the relevance and scope of sex education being part of the school curriculum, a leading sexologist in Denmark has called for pornography to be shown in the classroom.

    Show Porn In Classroom, Says Danish Professor

    Canadians Take 3,300-kilometre Road Trip To Kentucky In Fried Chicken Pilgrimage

    Canadians Take 3,300-kilometre Road Trip To Kentucky In Fried Chicken Pilgrimage
    CORBIN, Ky. — A road trip of more than 3,300 kilometres through two provinces and fives U.S. states might seem like a long way for some Canadians to go for fried chicken.

    Canadians Take 3,300-kilometre Road Trip To Kentucky In Fried Chicken Pilgrimage

    Royal Astronomical Society's Dark Sky Preserves Let People Enjoy Star-Gazing Again

    Royal Astronomical Society's Dark Sky Preserves Let People Enjoy Star-Gazing Again
    MONTREAL — Terry Dickinson remembers being five years old, stepping outside his parents' backyard in Toronto and staring in awe at the Milky Way and thousands of stars.

    Royal Astronomical Society's Dark Sky Preserves Let People Enjoy Star-Gazing Again

    Youngsters Tempted To Text Even During Sex

    Youngsters Tempted To Text Even During Sex
    Are you obsessed with texting in the shower, during sex, while using the toilet and even at funerals? Try not to give in to the temptation to check texts and send messages back and pay attention to the present situation.

    Youngsters Tempted To Text Even During Sex

    PrevNext