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Objective: Wearable devices that measure vital signals using photoplethysmography are becoming more commonplace. To reduce battery consumption, computational complexity, memory footprint or transmission bandwidth, companies of commercial wearable technologies are often looking to minimize the sampling frequency of the measured vital signals. One such vital signal of interest is the pulse arrival time (PAT), which is an indicator of blood pressure. To leverage this non-invasive and non-intrusive measurement data for use in clinical decision making, the accuracy of obtained PAT-parameters needs to increase in lower sampling frequency recordings. The aim of this paper is to develop a new strategy to estimate PAT at sampling frequencies up to 25 Hertz.
Approach: The method applies template matching to leverage the random nature of sampling time and expected change in the PAT.
Main results: The algorithm was tested on a publicly available dataset from 22 healthy volunteers, under sitting, walking and running conditions. The method significantly reduces both the mean and the standard deviation of the error when going to lower sampling frequencies by an average of 16.6% and 20.2%, respectively. Looking only at the sitting position, this reduction is even larger, increasing to an average of 22.2% and 48.8%, respectively.
Significance: This new method shows promise in allowing more accurate estimation of PAT even in lower frequency recordings.
Objective: Wearable devices that measure vital signals using photoplethysmography are becoming more commonplace. To reduce battery consumption, computational complexity, memory footprint or transmission bandwidth, companies of commercial wearable technologies are often looking to minimize the sampling frequency of the measured vital signals. One such vital signal of interest is the pulse arrival time (PAT), which is an indicator of blood pressure. To leverage this non-invasive and non-intrusive measurement data for use in clinical decision making, the accuracy of obtained PAT-parameters needs to increase in lower sampling frequency recordings. The aim of this paper is to develop a new strategy to estimate PAT at sampling frequencies up to 25 Hertz.
Approach: The method applies template matching to leverage the random nature of sampling time and expected change in the PAT.
Main results: The algorithm was tested on a publicly available dataset from 22 healthy volunteers, under sitting, walking and running conditions. The method significantly reduces both the mean and the standard deviation of the error when going to lower sampling frequencies by an average of 16.6% and 20.2%, respectively. Looking only at the sitting position, this reduction is even larger, increasing to an average of 22.2% and 48.8%, respectively.
Significance: This new method shows promise in allowing more accurate estimation of PAT even in lower frequency recordings.
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