4.6 Article

A Novel Smart Chair System for Posture Classification and Invisible ECG Monitoring

Journal

SENSORS
Volume 23, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/s23020719

Keywords

invisibles; sensory chair; posture classification; single-lead ECG; occupational health

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In recent years, the number of people employed in sedentary occupations has increased. Office workers spend a significant amount of their work hours sitting, which poses health risks and results in decreased productivity and increased healthcare costs. However, there is a lack of regulation addressing these issues.
In recent years, employment in sedentary occupations has continuously risen. Office workers are more prone to prolonged static sitting, spending 65-80% of work hours sitting, increasing risks for multiple health problems, including cardiovascular diseases and musculoskeletal disorders. These adverse health effects lead to decreased productivity, increased absenteeism and health care costs. However, lack of regulation targeting these issues has oftentimes left them unattended. This article proposes a smart chair system, with posture and electrocardiography (ECG) monitoring modules, using an invisible sensing approach, to optimize working conditions, without hindering everyday tasks. For posture classification, machine learning models were trained and tested with datasets composed by center of mass coordinates in the seat plane, computed from the weight measured by load cells fixed under the seat. Models were trained and evaluated in the classification of five and seven sitting positions, achieving high accuracy results for all five-class models (>97.4%), and good results for some seven-class models, particularly the best performing k-NN model (87.5%). For ECG monitoring, signals were acquired at the armrests covered with conductive nappa, connected to a single-lead sensor. Following signal filtering and segmentation, several outlier detection methods were applied to remove extremely noisy segments with mislabeled R-peaks, but only DBSCAN showed satisfactory results for the ECG segmentation performance (88.21%) and accuracy (90.50%).

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