In this paper, we present a system that allows emergency telephone calls to be made when a patient activates the alarm by pressing a button on the wireless ambulatory monitor. The system involves a triaxial accelerometer in-built to an RF (Radio Frequency) transmitter, RF receiver, telephone dialer module and a Personal Computer (PC) where data is stored for analysis.
SYNOPSIS:The frequency distribution of energy ill speech has been determined for six speakers, four men and two women, for a SO-syllable sentence of connected speech, and also for a list of 50 disconnected syllables. The speech was received by a condenser transmitter whose voltage output, amplified 3,000 fold, was impressed on the grids of twin single stage amplifiers. The unmodified output of one of these amplifiers was measured by a thermocouple and was a known function of the total energy received by the transmitter, corrections being made for the slight variation with frequency of the response of the circuit. The output of the other amplifier was limited by a series resonant circuit to a narrow band of frequencies, the energy in this band heing measured by a second thermocouple. The damping of the resonant circuit was so chosen that sufficient resolving power and sufficient energy, sensitiveness were obtained over the range from 15 to 5,000 cycles per second; and 23 frequency settings were made to cover this range. For each svllable simultaneous readings were recorded on the two thermocouples at each frequency setting. The consecutive syllables were pronounced deliberately by each speaker, maintaining as nearly as possible the normal modulation of the voice. Corrections were applied to offset the unavoidable variations in total energy incidental to repetition of a given syllable. 13,800 observations were made for all speakers. Tile l'Ilergy distribution curves obtained are essentially the same for connected as for disconnected speech, and indicate that differences between individuals are more important
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