Medical WSNs
From Cyber-Physical Systems Laboratory
Revision as of 22:04, 11 January 2008 by Ochipara (talk | contribs) (→SMART (Scalable Medeical Alert Response Technology))
Contents
Challenges
- reliability
- privacy and security
- power management - not all devices are battery powered
- diversity - both a challenge and an opportunity
Medical devices
- ECG
- SpO2
Groups
- University of Virginia: Alarm-NET
- Intel Research Seattle
- University of Washington
- University of Rochester
- Harvard University
Systems
SMART (Scalable Medeical Alert Response Technology)
- Domain: disaster recovery, triage
- Network architecture:
- Devices:
- Sensors:
- medical: SpO2, ECG
Notes:
Good background section.
References:
- Curtis DW, Pino EJ, Bailey JM, Shih EI, Waterman J, Vinterbo SA, Stair TO, Guttag JV, Greenes RA, Ohno-Machado L
SMART An Integrated Wireless System for Monitoring Unattended Patients. [JOURNAL ARTICLE] J Am Med Inform Assoc 2008 January-February; 15(1):44-53.
Alarm-NET
- Domain: assisted living, circadian activity rhythms (CAR)
- Network architecture:
- Spans body networks, sensor networks and IP networks
- Query service to collect data
- Emphasis on dynamic security
- Use CAR information for security and power management
- Devices: heterogeneous - motes, PDAs and PCs
- Sensors:
- medical: pulse, blood oxygenaton
- non-medical: temperature, light, infrared motion
References:
- A. Wood, G. Virone, T. Doan, Q. Cao, L. Selavo, Y. Wu, L. Fang, Z. He, S. Lin, J. Stankovic, “ALARM-NET: Wireless Sensor Networks for Assisted-Living and Residential Monitoring,” Technical Report