scholarly journals On-Body Edge Computing Through E-Textile Programmable Logic Array

Author(s):  
Frances Cleary ◽  
David C. Henshall ◽  
Sasitharan Balasubramaniam

E-textiles have received tremendous attention in recent years due to the capability of integrating sensors into a garment, enabling high-precision sensing of the human body. Besides sensing, a number of solutions for e-textile garments have also integrated wireless interfaces, allowing sensing data to be transmitted, and also inbuilt capacitive touch sensors, allowing users to provide instructions. While this has provided a new level of sensing that can result in unprecedented applications, there has been little attention placed around on-body edge computing for e-textiles. This study focuses on the need for a noninvasive and remote health-monitoring solution with inbuilt on-body edge computing, and how enabling such sensing and computing capabilities in a fabric environment can act as a new method for healthcare monitoring through the use of embedded computing intelligence in smart garments. Facilitating computing in e-textiles can result in a new form of on-body edge computing, where sensor information is processed very close to the body before being transmitted to an external device or wireless access point. This form of computing can provide new security and data privacy capabilities and, at the same time, provide opportunities for new energy-harvesting mechanisms to process the data through the garment. This study proposes this concept through embroidered programmable logic arrays (PLAs) integrated into e-textiles. In the same way that PLAs have programmable logic circuits by interconnecting different AND, NOT, and OR gates, we propose e-textile–based gates that are sewn into a garment and connected through conductive thread stitching. Two designs are proposed, and this includes single- and multi-layered PLAs. Experimental validations have been conducted at the individual gates and the entire PLA circuits to determine the voltage utilization and logic computing reliability. The multilayered PLA garment superseded the single-layered garment with higher levels of accuracy in the yielded results due to the enhanced design layout, which reduces the potential for short circuits and errors occurring. Our proposed approach can usher in a new form of on-body edge computing for e-textile garments for future wearable technologies, and, in particular, with the current pandemic that requires noninvasive remote health-monitoring applications.

2012 ◽  
Vol 12 (3) ◽  
pp. 566-573 ◽  
Author(s):  
Muhammad Zia Ur Rahman ◽  
Rafi Ahamed Shaik ◽  
D. V. Rama Koti Reddy

2013 ◽  
Vol 13 (9) ◽  
pp. 3276-3283 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gundlapalli Venkata Sai Karthik ◽  
Shaik Yasmin Fathima ◽  
Muhammad Zia Ur Rahman ◽  
Shaik Rafi Ahamed ◽  
Aime Lay-Ekuakille

2012 ◽  
Vol 19 (6) ◽  
pp. 10-18 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiaohui Liang ◽  
Mrinmoy Barua ◽  
Le Chen ◽  
Rongxing Lu ◽  
Xuemin Shen ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Manish Chaudhary

As the technology changing every year so, there has been an attempt to apply the new technology in numerous areas to increase the quality of human life. One of the main fields of research that has seen an implementation of the technology is the healthcare sector. Consequently, our paper is an effort to solve a healthcare problem currently people are facing. Main objective of our paper is to enterprise a remote healthcare system. It covers of three key parts. The first part is, detection of patient’s condition with the proposed system, second is to storing data on cloud storage and the last part is to provide the data for isolated viewing. Remote observing of the data empowers a doctor or custodian to television a patient’s health advancement from anywhere. In this project, we have obtainable an IoT architecture personalized for healthcare applications. The main motive of this scheme is to come up with a Remote Health Monitoring System that will completed with locally available sensors with a view to manufacture it reasonable for everybody


2011 ◽  
Vol 17 (7) ◽  
pp. 574-579 ◽  
Author(s):  
Karen A. Kovach ◽  
Jill Ann Aubrecht ◽  
Mary Amanda Dew ◽  
Brad Myers ◽  
Annette DeVito Dabbs

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document