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1.
J Adv Nurs ; 77(5): 2519-2529, 2021 May.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33576064

RESUMEN

AIM: The aim of this study is to develop a Smarthealth system of monitoring, modelling, and interactive recommendation solutions (for caregivers) for in-home dementia patient care that focuses on caregiver-patient relationships. DESIGN: This descriptive study employs a single-group, non-randomized trial to examine functionality, effectiveness, feasibility, and acceptability of the novel Smarthealth system. METHODS: Thirty persons with Alzheimer's Disease or related dementia and their family caregivers (N = 30 dyads) will receive and install Smarthealth technology in their home. There will be a 1-month observation phase for collecting baseline mood states and a 2-month implementation phase when caregivers will receive stress management techniques for each detected, negative mood state. Caregivers will report technique implementation and usefulness, sent via Ecological Momentary Assessment system to the study-provided smartphone. Caregivers will provide daily, self-reported mood and health ratings. Instruments measuring caregiver assessment of disruptive behaviours and their effect on caregivers; caregiver depressive symptoms, anxiety and stress; caregiver strain; and family functioning will be completed at baseline and 3 months. The study received funding in 2018 and ethics board approval in 2019. DISCUSSION: This study will develop and test novel in-home technology to improve family caregiving relationships. Results from this study will help develop and improve the Smarthealth recommendation system and determine its usefulness, feasibility, and acceptability for persons with dementia and their family caregiver. IMPACT: The Smarthealth technology discussed will provide in-home stress reduction resources at a time when older adults may be experiencing increasingly high rates of isolation and anxiety and caregiver dyads may be experiencing high levels of relationship strain. TRIAL REGISTRATION: This study was registered with Clinical Trials.gov (Identifier NCT04536701).


Asunto(s)
Enfermedad de Alzheimer , Demencia , Anciano , Ansiedad , Cuidadores , Humanos , Tecnología
2.
J Gerontol Nurs ; 44(8): 19-26, 2018 Aug 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30059136

RESUMEN

Nighttime agitation, sleep disturbances, and urinary incontinence (UI) occur frequently in individuals with dementia and can add additional burden to family caregivers, although the co-occurrence of these symptoms is not well understood. The purpose of the current study was to determine the feasibility and acceptability of using passive body sensors in community-dwelling individuals with Alzheimer's disease (AD) by family caregivers and the correlates among these distressing symptoms. A single-group, descriptive design with convenience sampling of participants with AD and their family caregivers was undertaken to address the study aims. Results showed that using body sensors was feasible and acceptable and that patterns of nocturnal agitation, sleep, and UI could be determined and were correlated in study participants. Using data from body sensors may be useful to develop and implement targeted, individualized interventions to lessen these distressing symptoms and decrease caregiver burden. Further study in this field is warranted. [Journal of Gerontological Nursing, 44(8), 19-26.].


Asunto(s)
Enfermedad de Alzheimer/enfermería , Monitoreo del Ambiente/instrumentación , Enfermería Geriátrica/métodos , Monitoreo Ambulatorio/instrumentación , Agitación Psicomotora/diagnóstico , Trastornos del Sueño-Vigilia/diagnóstico , Incontinencia Urinaria/diagnóstico , Adulto , Anciano , Anciano de 80 o más Años , Femenino , Humanos , Masculino , Persona de Mediana Edad
3.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38515455

RESUMEN

Wearable devices like smartwatches and smart wristbands have gained substantial popularity in recent years. However, their small interfaces create inconvenience and limit computing functionality. To fill this gap, we propose ViWatch, which enables robust finger interactions under deployment variations, and relies on a single IMU sensor that is ubiquitous in COTS smartwatches. To this end, we design an unsupervised Siamese adversarial learning method. We built a real-time system on commodity smartwatches and tested it with over one hundred volunteers. Results show that the system accuracy is about 97% over a week. In addition, it is resistant to deployment variations such as different hand shapes, finger activity strengths, and smartwatch positions on the wrist. We also developed a number of mobile applications using our interactive system and conducted a user study where all participants preferred our un-supervised approach to supervised calibration. The demonstration of ViWatch is shown at https://youtu.be/N5-ggvy2qfI.

4.
Annu Int Conf IEEE Eng Med Biol Soc ; 2022: 2438-2441, 2022 07.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36086037

RESUMEN

Following several health activities in daily life (e.g., medication/exercise plans, handwashing, physiological monitoring) properly often requires monitoring and assistance support. Although the emergent smartwatch and wearable technologies have opened great opportunities to monitor these activities in the wild, existing smartwatch-based systems do not interactively guide the user and also lacks comprehensiveness to provide knowledge related to this set of daily activities. To overcome these limitations of the state-of-the-art, we present Voice Care, a wearable cognitive assistant on a smartwatch for daily life healthcare that interactively assists the user and monitors adherence to these activities. We conduct an extensive user study and thorough evaluation on collected data to show that VoiceCare effectively brings multiple health sensing solutions into one system while operating with minimal resource usage and helps improve the user conformance to daily health.


Asunto(s)
Atención a la Salud , Dispositivos Electrónicos Vestibles , Cognición , Instituciones de Salud , Monitoreo Fisiológico
5.
Annu Int Conf IEEE Eng Med Biol Soc ; 2022: 4668-4671, 2022 07.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36085654

RESUMEN

Detecting the correct emotion is crucial for improved mental health outcomes. While the existing works on emotion recognition focus on detecting the common or primary emotions only, there exists some uncommon or secondary emotions of similar kind (e.g., contempt vs anger) that makes accurate emotion detection challenging. Moreover, there exists limited labeled data on such secondary emotions. We present the first work to accurately discriminate among such similar emotions by generating distinguishable data for the secondary emotions using convenient multimodal wrist sensors. Extensive evaluations show that our novel solution provides around 7-36 % F1-score improvement to existing solutions for similar emotions, and also significantly reduces the burden on providing labeled emotion data.


Asunto(s)
Emociones , Dispositivos Electrónicos Vestibles , Muñeca , Articulación de la Muñeca
6.
JMIR Mhealth Uhealth ; 10(2): e30211, 2022 02 18.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35179508

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: The field of dietary assessment has a long history, marked by both controversies and advances. Emerging technologies may be a potential solution to address the limitations of self-report dietary assessment methods. The Monitoring and Modeling Family Eating Dynamics (M2FED) study uses wrist-worn smartwatches to automatically detect real-time eating activity in the field. The ecological momentary assessment (EMA) methodology was also used to confirm whether eating occurred (ie, ground truth) and to measure other contextual information, including positive and negative affect, hunger, satiety, mindful eating, and social context. OBJECTIVE: This study aims to report on participant compliance (feasibility) to the 2 distinct EMA protocols of the M2FED study (hourly time-triggered and eating event-triggered assessments) and on the performance (validity) of the smartwatch algorithm in automatically detecting eating events in a family-based study. METHODS: In all, 20 families (58 participants) participated in the 2-week, observational, M2FED study. All participants wore a smartwatch on their dominant hand and responded to time-triggered and eating event-triggered mobile questionnaires via EMA while at home. Compliance to EMA was calculated overall, for hourly time-triggered mobile questionnaires, and for eating event-triggered mobile questionnaires. The predictors of compliance were determined using a logistic regression model. The number of true and false positive eating events was calculated, as well as the precision of the smartwatch algorithm. The Mann-Whitney U test, Kruskal-Wallis test, and Spearman rank correlation were used to determine whether there were differences in the detection of eating events by participant age, gender, family role, and height. RESULTS: The overall compliance rate across the 20 deployments was 89.26% (3723/4171) for all EMAs, 89.7% (3328/3710) for time-triggered EMAs, and 85.7% (395/461) for eating event-triggered EMAs. Time of day (afternoon odds ratio [OR] 0.60, 95% CI 0.42-0.85; evening OR 0.53, 95% CI 0.38-0.74) and whether other family members had also answered an EMA (OR 2.07, 95% CI 1.66-2.58) were significant predictors of compliance to time-triggered EMAs. Weekend status (OR 2.40, 95% CI 1.25-4.91) and deployment day (OR 0.92, 95% CI 0.86-0.97) were significant predictors of compliance to eating event-triggered EMAs. Participants confirmed that 76.5% (302/395) of the detected events were true eating events (ie, true positives), and the precision was 0.77. The proportion of correctly detected eating events did not significantly differ by participant age, gender, family role, or height (P>.05). CONCLUSIONS: This study demonstrates that EMA is a feasible tool to collect ground-truth eating activity and thus evaluate the performance of wearable sensors in the field. The combination of a wrist-worn smartwatch to automatically detect eating and a mobile device to capture ground-truth eating activity offers key advantages for the user and makes mobile health technologies more accessible to nonengineering behavioral researchers.


Asunto(s)
Evaluación Ecológica Momentánea , Conducta Alimentaria , Estudios de Factibilidad , Humanos , Autoinforme , Encuestas y Cuestionarios
7.
Smart Health (Amst) ; 19: 100171, 2021 Mar.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33521225

RESUMEN

Washing hands properly and frequently is the simplest and most cost-effective interventions to prevent the spread of infectious diseases. People are often ignorant about proper handwashing in different situations and do not know if they wash hands properly. Smartwatches are found to be effective for assessing the quality of handwashing. However, the existing smartwatch based systems are not comprehensive enough in terms of achieving accuracy as well as reminding people to handwash and providing feedback to the user about the quality of handwashing. On-device processing is often required to provide real-time feedback to the user, and so it is important to develop a system that runs efficiently on low-resource devices like smartwatches. However, none of the existing systems for handwashing quality assessment are optimized for on-device processing. We present iWash, a comprehensive system for quality assessment and context-aware reminders for handwashing with real-time feedback using smartwatches. iWash is a hybrid deep neural network based system that is optimized for on-device processing to ensure high accuracy with minimal processing time and battery usage. Additionally, it is a context-aware system that detects when the user is entering home using a Bluetooth beacon and provides reminders to wash hands. iWash also offers touch-free interaction between the user and the smartwatch that minimizes the risk of germ transmission. We collected a real-life dataset and conducted extensive evaluations to demonstrate the performance of iWash. Compared to existing handwashing quality assessment systems, we achieve around 12% higher accuracy for quality assessment, as well as we reduce the processing time and battery usage by around 37% and 10%, respectively.

8.
NPJ Digit Med ; 3: 38, 2020.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32195373

RESUMEN

Dietary intake, eating behaviors, and context are important in chronic disease development, yet our ability to accurately assess these in research settings can be limited by biased traditional self-reporting tools. Objective measurement tools, specifically, wearable sensors, present the opportunity to minimize the major limitations of self-reported eating measures by generating supplementary sensor data that can improve the validity of self-report data in naturalistic settings. This scoping review summarizes the current use of wearable devices/sensors that automatically detect eating-related activity in naturalistic research settings. Five databases were searched in December 2019, and 618 records were retrieved from the literature search. This scoping review included N = 40 studies (from 33 articles) that reported on one or more wearable sensors used to automatically detect eating activity in the field. The majority of studies (N = 26, 65%) used multi-sensor systems (incorporating > 1 wearable sensors), and accelerometers were the most commonly utilized sensor (N = 25, 62.5%). All studies (N = 40, 100.0%) used either self-report or objective ground-truth methods to validate the inferred eating activity detected by the sensor(s). The most frequently reported evaluation metrics were Accuracy (N = 12) and F1-score (N = 10). This scoping review highlights the current state of wearable sensors' ability to improve upon traditional eating assessment methods by passively detecting eating activity in naturalistic settings, over long periods of time, and with minimal user interaction. A key challenge in this field, wide variation in eating outcome measures and evaluation metrics, demonstrates the need for the development of a standardized form of comparability among sensors/multi-sensor systems and multidisciplinary collaboration.

9.
Transl Behav Med ; 9(3): 422-430, 2019 05 16.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31094447

RESUMEN

Family relationships influence eating behavior and health outcomes (e.g., obesity). Because eating is often habitual (i.e., automatically driven by external cues), unconscious behavioral mimicry may be a key interpersonal influence mechanism for eating within families. This pilot study extends existing literature on eating mimicry by examining whether multiple family members mimicked each other's bites during natural meals. Thirty-three participants from 10 families were videotaped while eating an unstructured family meal in a kitchen lab setting. Videotapes were coded for participants' bite occurrences and times. We tested whether the likelihood of a participant taking a bite increased when s/he was externally cued by a family eating partner who had recently taken a bite (i.e., bite mimicry). A paired-sample t-test indicated that participants had a significantly faster eating rate within the 5 s following a bite by their eating partner, compared to their bite rate at other times (t = 7.32, p < .0001). Nonparametric permutation testing identified five of 78 dyads in which there was significant evidence of eating mimicry; and 19 of 78 dyads that had p values < .1. This pilot study provides preliminary evidence that suggests eating mimicry may occur among a subset of family members, and that there may be types of family ties more prone to this type of interpersonal influence during meals.


Asunto(s)
Ingestión de Alimentos/psicología , Familia/psicología , Conducta Alimentaria/psicología , Adolescente , Femenino , Humanos , Masculino , Obesidad , Proyectos Piloto
10.
IEEE Trans Inf Technol Biomed ; 12(3): 387-98, 2008 May.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18693506

RESUMEN

In this paper, we examine at-home activity rhythms and present a dozen of behavioral patterns obtained from an activity monitoring pilot study of 22 residents in an assisted living setting with four case studies. Established behavioral patterns have been captured using custom software based on a statistical predictive algorithm that models circadian activity rhythms (CARs) and their deviations. The CAR was statistically estimated based on the average amount of time a resident spent in each room within their assisted living apartment, and also on the activity level given by the average number of motion events per room. A validated in-home monitoring system (IMS) recorded the monitored resident's movement data and established the occupancy period and activity level for each room. Using these data, residents' circadian behaviors were extracted, deviations indicating anomalies were detected, and the latter were correlated to activity reports generated by the IMS as well as notes of the facility's professional caregivers on the monitored residents. The system could be used to detect deviations in activity patterns and to warn caregivers of such deviations, which could reflect changes in health status, thus providing caregivers with the opportunity to apply standard of care diagnostics and to intervene in a timely manner.


Asunto(s)
Actividades Cotidianas , Instituciones de Vida Asistida/estadística & datos numéricos , Conducta/fisiología , Ritmo Circadiano/fisiología , Monitoreo Ambulatorio/métodos , Monitoreo Ambulatorio/estadística & datos numéricos , Reconocimiento de Normas Patrones Automatizadas/métodos , Anciano , Anciano de 80 o más Años , Algoritmos , Femenino , Humanos , Masculino , Persona de Mediana Edad
11.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31187083

RESUMEN

Although social anxiety and depression are common, they are often underdiagnosed and undertreated, in part due to difficulties identifying and accessing individuals in need of services. Current assessments rely on client self-report and clinician judgment, which are vulnerable to social desirability and other subjective biases. Identifying objective, nonburdensome markers of these mental health problems, such as features of speech, could help advance assessment, prevention, and treatment approaches. Prior research examining speech detection methods has focused on fully supervised learning approaches employing strongly labeled data. However, strong labeling of individuals high in symptoms or state affect in speech audio data is impractical, in part because it is not possible to identify with high confidence which regions of a long speech indicate the person's symptoms or affective state. We propose a weakly supervised learning framework for detecting social anxiety and depression from long audio clips. Specifically, we present a novel feature modeling technique named NN2Vec that identifies and exploits the inherent relationship between speakers' vocal states and symptoms/affective states. Detecting speakers high in social anxiety or depression symptoms using NN2Vec features achieves F-1 scores 17% and 13% higher than those of the best available baselines. In addition, we present a new multiple instance learning adaptation of a BLSTM classifier, named BLSTM-MIL. Our novel framework of using NN2Vec features with the BLSTM-MIL classifier achieves F-1 scores of 90.1% and 85.44% in detecting speakers high in social anxiety and depression symptoms.

12.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29276807

RESUMEN

DAVE is a comprehensive set of event detection techniques to monitor and detect 5 important verbal agitations: asking for help, verbal sexual advances, questions, cursing, and talking with repetitive sentences. The novelty of DAVE includes combining acoustic signal processing with three different text mining paradigms to detect verbal events (asking for help, verbal sexual advances, and questions) which need both lexical content and acoustic variations to produce accurate results. To detect cursing and talking with repetitive sentences we extend word sense disambiguation and sequential pattern mining algorithms. The solutions have applicability to monitoring dementia patients, for online video sharing applications, human computer interaction (HCI) systems, home safety, and other health care applications. A comprehensive performance evaluation across multiple domains includes audio clips collected from 34 real dementia patients, audio data from controlled environments, movies and Youtube clips, online data repositories, and healthy residents in real homes. The results show significant improvement over baselines and high accuracy for all 5 vocal events.

13.
Philos Trans A Math Phys Eng Sci ; 370(1958): 52-67, 2012 Jan 13.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22124081

RESUMEN

This paper presents a holistic view of energy management in sensor networks. We first discuss hardware designs that support the life cycle of energy, namely: (i) energy harvesting, (ii) energy storage and (iii) energy consumption and control. Then, we discuss individual software designs that manage energy consumption in sensor networks. These energy-aware designs include media access control, routing, localization and time-synchronization. At the end of this paper, we present a case study of the VigilNet system to explain how to integrate various types of energy management techniques to achieve collaborative energy savings in a large-scale deployed military surveillance system.

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