Health smart clothes are in contact with almost all the surface of the skin offer large possibilities for the location of sensors for non invasive measurements. Head band, collar, tee-shirt, socks, shoes, belts for chest, arm, wrist, legs ... provide localization with specific purpose taking into account their proximity of an organ or a source of biosignal, and also its ergonomic possibility (user friendly) to fix a sensor, and the associated instrumentations (batteries, amplifiers, signal processing, telecom, alarm, display ...). Progress in science and technology offers, for the first time, intelligence, speed, miniaturization, sophistication and new materials at low cost. In this new landscape, microtechnologies, information technologies and telecommunications are a key factor. Microsensors : Microtechnologies offer the possibility of small size, but also intelligent, active device, working with low energy, wireless and non invasive or mini invasive. These sensors have to be thin, flexible and compatible with textile, or made using textile technologies, new fibers with specific properties: mechanical, electrical, optical ... The field of applications is very large, e.g. continuous monitoring on elderly population, professional and military activities, athlete's performance and condition, and people with disabilities. The research are oriented toward two complementary directions: Improving the relevancy of each sensor and increasing the number of sensors for having a more global synthetic and robust information.
Skin temperature is a relevant and effective indicator for objective evaluation of human sensations and thermal states according to the surrounding thermal stresses. Managed by skin blood flow, sympathetic nervous system (constriction and sweating), subcutaneous thermal structure and facial vein patterns, facial coetaneous temperature variability can give information non-invasively on many physiological functions. These informations are deduced from thermal images obtained by far infrared imaging (7 - 14 microm). The work presented here deals with facial thermographic image analysis. Thermal regions of interest are extracted, such as left and right front, left and right cheek, left and right periobital region. Each region is analyzed by the FFT power spectrum calculation regarding to specific spectral band.
Usually, organoleptic criteria have to be fulfilled for tap water in order for it to be considered safe to drink. This can be achieved at three levels: chemical analysis, sensory analysis, or through electrophysiology. While chemical analysis has been quite extensively discussed in the literature and as consumer perception is of vital importance, we propose a review of the latter two levels, namely sensory analysis and electrophysiology. We first recall some basics of perception and how it can be influenced by stimuli properties, human intrinsic factors and contextual factors, which are critical for an efficient measurement. Next, we present sensory analysis methods, as these are usually carried out in order to measure consumer appreciation of water. The drawbacks of such methods are then discussed before introducing the alternative of electrophysiological measurements. Some evidence that activity from the central and autonomic nervous systems can be measured in response to gustatory and olfactory stimuli in water is first described. Then, a review of objective physiological methods in the literature, developed to assess the emotional aspect of these reactions, is detailed. Finally, the possibility of correlating and predicting the quality, intensity, and hedonic dimension of a stimulus in water with sensory self-report and nervous system responses is discussed.
Pressure ulcers constitute an important health problem. They affect lots of people with mobility disorder and they are difficult to detect and prevent because the damage begins on the muscle. This paper proposes a new approach to study pressure ulcers. We aim at developing a methodology to analyse the probability for a patient to develop a pressure ulcer, and that can detect risky situation. The idea is to relate the mobility disorder to autonomic nervous system (ANS) trouble. More precisely, the evaluation of the consequence of the discomfort on the ANS (stress induced by discomfort) can be relevant for the early detection of the pressure ulcer. Mobility is evaluated through movement measurement. This evaluation, at the interface between soft living tissues and any support has to consider the specificity of the human environment. Soft living tissues have non-linear mechanical properties making conventional rigid sensors non suitable for interface parameters measurement. A new actimeter system has been designed in order to study movements of the human body whatever its support while seating. The device is based on elementary active cells. The number of pressure cells can be easily adapted to the application. The spatial resolution is about 4 cm(2). In this paper, we compare activity measurement of a seated subject with his autonomic nervous system activity, recorded by E.motion device. It has been developed in order to record six parameters: skin potential, skin resistance, skin temperature, skin blood rate, instantaneous cardiac frequency and instantaneous respiratory frequency. The design, instrumentation, and first results are presented.
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