scholarly journals SU-PhysioDB: A physiological signals database for body area network security

Author(s):  
Duygu Karaoglan Altop ◽  
Albert Levi ◽  
Volkan Tuzcu
2013 ◽  
Vol 31 (9) ◽  
pp. 37-46 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chunqiang Hu ◽  
Nan Zhang ◽  
Hongjuan Li ◽  
Xiuzhen Cheng ◽  
Xiaofeng Liao

Electronics ◽  
2022 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 155
Author(s):  
Juan Antonio Castro-García ◽  
Alberto Jesús Molina-Cantero ◽  
Isabel María Gómez-González ◽  
Sergio Lafuente-Arroyo ◽  
Manuel Merino-Monge

Detecting stress when performing physical activities is an interesting field that has received relatively little research interest to date. In this paper, we took a first step towards redressing this, through a comprehensive review and the design of a low-cost body area network (BAN) made of a set of wearables that allow physiological signals and human movements to be captured simultaneously. We used four different wearables: OpenBCI and three other open-hardware custom-made designs that communicate via bluetooth low energy (BLE) to an external computer—following the edge-computingconcept—hosting applications for data synchronization and storage. We obtained a large number of physiological signals (electroencephalography (EEG), electrocardiography (ECG), breathing rate (BR), electrodermal activity (EDA), and skin temperature (ST)) with which we analyzed internal states in general, but with a focus on stress. The findings show the reliability and feasibility of the proposed body area network (BAN) according to battery lifetime (greater than 15 h), packet loss rate (0% for our custom-made designs), and signal quality (signal-noise ratio (SNR) of 9.8 dB for the ECG circuit, and 61.6 dB for the EDA). Moreover, we conducted a preliminary experiment to gauge the main ECG features for stress detection during rest.


Author(s):  
Muhammad Sheraz Arshad Malik ◽  
Muhammad Ahmed ◽  
Tahir Abdullah ◽  
Naila Kousar ◽  
Mehak Nigar ◽  
...  

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