scholarly journals A Distributed Multiagent System Architecture for Body Area Networks Applied to Healthcare Monitoring

2015 ◽  
Vol 2015 ◽  
pp. 1-17 ◽  
Author(s):  
Filipe Felisberto ◽  
Rosalía Laza ◽  
Florentino Fdez-Riverola ◽  
António Pereira

In the last years the area of health monitoring has grown significantly, attracting the attention of both academia and commercial sectors. At the same time, the availability of new biomedical sensors and suitable network protocols has led to the appearance of a new generation of wireless sensor networks, the so-called wireless body area networks. Nowadays, these networks are routinely used for continuous monitoring of vital parameters, movement, and the surrounding environment of people, but the large volume of data generated in different locations represents a major obstacle for the appropriate design, development, and deployment of more elaborated intelligent systems. In this context, we present an open and distributed architecture based on a multiagent system for recognizing human movements, identifying human postures, and detecting harmful activities. The proposed system evolved from a single node for fall detection to a multisensor hardware solution capable of identifying unhampered falls and analyzing the users’ movement. The experiments carried out contemplate two different scenarios and demonstrate the accuracy of our proposal as a real distributed movement monitoring and accident detection system. Moreover, we also characterize its performance, enabling future analyses and comparisons with similar approaches.

IEEE Access ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 8 ◽  
pp. 193060-193074
Author(s):  
Luigi La Blunda ◽  
Lorena Gutierrez-Madronal ◽  
Matthias F. Wagner ◽  
Inmaculada Medina-Bulo

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Costas Michaelides ◽  
Foteini-Niovi Pavlidou

In body area networks (BANs), a node placed near the hub has a significant signal strength advantage. This issue, known as near-far problem, indicates that a near node may serve as a relay for a far node. Currently, the established orthogonal multiple access (OMA) requires the allocation of a specific resource block to a single node. In contrast, the emerging non-orthogonal multiple access (NOMA) allows simultaneous transmissions and uses successive interference cancellation (SIC) to recover the signals. For the first time in the literature, we introduce NOMA in BANs, to allow simultaneous transmissions from two nodes at a time, with distinguishable power levels. The crucial part of this technique is the dynamic pairing of the nodes by the hub. First, we review the fundamentals of uplink NOMA and we propose an access protocol in compliance with IEEE 802.15.6-2012, which combines random OMA with scheduled NOMA. Next, we propose three node pairing strategies, namely a random, a correlative and a conditional one, to meet the requirements of several applications. These strategies are evaluated with packet level simulations in OMNeT++. Our results show that the proposed scheme outperforms the basic OMA scheme at high packet rates and provides a feasible direction for novel relay-based applications.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Costas Michaelides ◽  
Foteini-Niovi Pavlidou

In body area networks (BANs), a node placed near the hub has a significant signal strength advantage. This issue, known as near-far problem, indicates that a near node may serve as a relay for a far node. Currently, the established orthogonal multiple access (OMA) requires the allocation of a specific resource block to a single node. In contrast, the emerging non-orthogonal multiple access (NOMA) allows simultaneous transmissions and uses successive interference cancellation (SIC) to recover the signals. For the first time in the literature, we introduce NOMA in BANs, to allow simultaneous transmissions from two nodes at a time, with distinguishable power levels. The crucial part of this technique is the dynamic pairing of the nodes by the hub. First, we review the fundamentals of uplink NOMA and we propose an access protocol in compliance with IEEE 802.15.6-2012, which combines random OMA with scheduled NOMA. Next, we propose three node pairing strategies, namely a random, a correlative and a conditional one, to meet the requirements of several applications. These strategies are evaluated with packet level simulations in OMNeT++. Our results show that the proposed scheme outperforms the basic OMA scheme at high packet rates and provides a feasible direction for novel relay-based applications.


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