4.0 Article

Motion-Tolerant Magnetic Earring Sensor and Wireless Earpiece for Wearable Photoplethysmography

Journal

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TITB.2010.2042607

Keywords

Ambulatory monitoring; heart rate; motion noise removal; pervasive health; photoplethysmography (PPG); wearable biosensors

Funding

  1. Nancy Lurie Marks Family Foundation

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This paper addresses the design considerations and critical evaluation of a novel embodiment for wearable photoplethysmography (PPG) comprising a magnetic earring sensor and wireless earpiece. The miniaturized sensor can be worn comfortably on the earlobe and contains an embedded accelerometer to provide motion reference for adaptive noise cancellation. The compact wireless earpiece provides analog signal conditioning and acts as a data-forwarding device via a radio frequency transceiver. Using Bland-Altman and correlation analysis, we evaluated the performance of the proposed system against an FDA-approved ECG measurement device during daily activities. The mean +/- standard deviation (SD) of the differences between heart rate measurements from the proposed device and ECG (expressed as percentage of the average between the two techniques) along with the 95% limits of agreement (LOA = +/- 1.96 SD) was 0.62% +/- 4.51% (LOA = -8.23% and 9.46%), -0.49% +/- 8.65% (-17.39% and 16.42%), and -0.32% +/- 10.63% (-21.15% and 20.52%) during standing, walking, and running, respectively. Linear regression indicated a high correlation between the two measurements across the three evaluated conditions (r = 0.97, 0.82, and 0.76, respectively with p < 0.001). The new earring PPG system provides a platform for comfortable, robust, unobtrusive, and discreet monitoring of cardiovascular function.

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