2020
DOI: 10.1016/j.measurement.2019.07.032
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Towards health monitoring using remote heart rate measurement using digital camera: A feasibility study

Abstract: a b s t r a c tThe paper presents a feasibility study for heart rate measurement using a digital camera to perform health monitoring. The feasibility study investigates the reliability of the state of the art heart rate measuring methods in realistic situations. Therefore, an experiment was designed and carried out on 45 subjects to investigate the effects caused by illumination, motion, skin tone, and distance variance. The experiment was conducted for two main scenarios; human-computer interaction scenario a… Show more

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Cited by 27 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…The heart rate varies according to the sex, age, and physiological status of each body [69]. For example, the heart rate of a baby can be as high as 130 bpm, while the heart rate of a woman is slightly faster than that of a man.…”
Section: Physiological Changes Evaluationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The heart rate varies according to the sex, age, and physiological status of each body [69]. For example, the heart rate of a baby can be as high as 130 bpm, while the heart rate of a woman is slightly faster than that of a man.…”
Section: Physiological Changes Evaluationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…ROI tracking also fails when participants move at an extensive angle and participants' facial expressions created noise which then shows high variations in the obtained signal. Different researchers have used datasets collected from lab setups to test and validate their methods; However, these have not been validated in realistic environments [192]. Various datasets include PURE [193], MAHNOB-HCI [194], [195], COHFACE [196], MMSE-HR [197], BH-rPPG [198], MPSC-rPPG Dataset [199] and UBFC-RPPG [200] and ARPOS dataset [66], [201].…”
Section: Literature Review Findings: Previous Workmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A smart shirt is a device that uses optical and electrical fibers to check some essential organs of the human, such as respiration speed, body temperature, inhalation measurement, and so on. The ring sensor is a pulse oximetry sensor based on a biosensor sensor and monitors heart rate [ 46 ] and oxygen saturation. Among the wearable sensors, we can mention biosensors, which include natural sensory elements and transducers, and the collected data from these wearable sensors are processed according to a particular program.…”
Section: Har Analysismentioning
confidence: 99%