2018
DOI: 10.5664/jcsm.7236
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A Pilot Study of Impulse Radio Ultra Wideband Radar Technology as a New Tool for Sleep Assessment

Abstract: Impulse radio ultra wideband radar technology is a promising tool in terms of affordable and practical objective sleep assessment. Further technical development and more validation studies are needed in order to conclude about the utility potential of this device.

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Cited by 23 publications
(15 citation statements)
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“…The accuracy of the system was around 70% for apnea detection. In a study related to sleep monitoring using IR-UWB radar [95], authors have measured the total body movement as well as respiration during sleep from the radar signals by forming range-frequency-power matrices. The matrices are generated using the FFT algorithm on data from each 5 cm distance increment.…”
Section: Sleep Monitoringmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The accuracy of the system was around 70% for apnea detection. In a study related to sleep monitoring using IR-UWB radar [95], authors have measured the total body movement as well as respiration during sleep from the radar signals by forming range-frequency-power matrices. The matrices are generated using the FFT algorithm on data from each 5 cm distance increment.…”
Section: Sleep Monitoringmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Several existing studies also utilize objective measures of sleep, typically employing actigraphy or, to a lesser extent, polysomnography (PSG). The former has generally limited specificity ( Marino et al, 2013 ) and cannot differentiate between sleep stages, whereas PSG suffers from practical drawbacks related to cost, skills, and time, limiting its feasibility in long-term sleep assessment ( Pallesen et al, 2018 ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Activity monitoring can be done nonobtrusive and with low costs using radar technology [ 16 ]. Since a couple of years, several engineering companies have developed radar technology devices which are placed on a bedside table and record the movements of the sleeping person [ 17 ]. These devices essentially derive the same signals as ballistocardiography: coarse body movements, respiration related movements, and the HR.…”
Section: Movement Recordingmentioning
confidence: 99%