Title: Wearable Computing and Personal Medical Systems
1Wearable Computing and Personal Medical Systems
- Sandra Woolley
- http//www.eee.bham.ac.uk/woolleysi
- S.I.Woolley_at_bham.ac.uk
- Electronic, Electrical and Computer Engineering
2Wearable Computing
- Wearable, hand-held and portable technologies are
pervading aspects of our everyday lives. The
presentation will review wearable and pervasive
computing research directions, challenges and
applications, and a look ahead at new potentials
in personal medical devices. - Starting with the original ubiquitous computing
visions of Mark Weisner considering
applications and their accompanying challenges.
For example, aesthetics, function, usability,
and, security and privacy. - Wearable computing project examples from the
Pervasive Computing and Human Interface
Technology Research based at the University of
Birmingham and elsewhere. Including new personal
medical devices.
3Contents
- From the beginning personal and wearable
information technology and what people will
wear. - Wearable and ubiquitous computing.
- Design issues and research questions.
- Sensors, communications, context and privacy.
- Example of wearable computing and personal
medical devices.
4 Towards Personal Information Technology
5Personal Portable Information
- Cuneiform - the first form of writing predating
Egyptian hieroglyphs. -
- The first personal and portable information
technology? - Legal documents, statements of freedom,
record-keeping. - www.cuneiform.net
- A collaborative project, headed by Assyriologist
Dr Alasdair Livingstone, between The University
of Birmingham and The British Museum.
6Wearable Information - The Wristwatch
- A wristwatch was a womans jewellery item before
WW1 made it a useful piece of wearable
technology. - Pocket watches were clumsy to carry and thus
difficult to operate while in combat. - Soldiers came home wearing trench watches and
the feminine perception of the wristwatch was
gone forever.
- Above The WWI Soldiers Kit and WW1 wristwatch
from Umstead Collection - Top Righthttp//www.207squadron.rafinfo.org.uk/ww
1/1918.htm - Bottom Right Sittingborne http//www.pigstrough.
co.uk/ww1/
7What Will/Wont People Wear?
- What will people wear?
- What wont people wear?
- Clothes and accessories must be acceptable to the
society/culture.
8Aesthetics
- Notions of ideal shape and ideal beauty vary
dramatically over time and between cultures.
Above http//www.uihealthcare.com Top left - A
veiled Iranian woman wears a traditional dress as
she smokes a water pipe Photo Hasan
Sarbakhshian Top right - Jodie Kidd
9Geek Cool?
- Aesthetics of wearing technology?
- Does my RAM look big in this?
- (Eurowearable keynote speech)
- Most people dont want to look silly even we
didnt want to wear our own prototype in public! - But is wearing technology a geek thing anymore?
Microsoft Fashion 2000 http//www.microsoft.com/
presspass/features/2000/Dec00/12-11fashion.mspx
10The Geek Age
- The Levi/Philips ICD MP3/Phone Jacket was an
early TechVest project. - The ScotteVest is a large range of commercial
jackets that support the integration of everyday
portable electronics. Routing for cables, up to
52 pockets and even models with solar panels.
www.scottevest.com/ www.thinkgeek.com
11 Towards Wearable Computing
12Pervasive/Ubiquitous/Wearable/Embedded?
- Pervasive or Ubiquitous computing labels are
often used interchangeably. - Wearable computing significantly overlaps with
these but specifically includes subjects like
smart textiles, and fashion. The sort of
computing that might have been called personal
computing. - Mobile computing is an essential requirement for
all the above. - Embedded systems, being systems (other than
general purpose computing systems) that have
added processor intelligence, therefore include
wearable computing systems.
13Mark Wesier and Ubiquitous Computing
- The father of ubiquitous computing.
- His ideas were summarised in a Scientific
American article, The Computer for the 21st
Century. - He described ubiquitous computers of different
sizes which he called tabs, pads and boards - Tabs - post-it scale
- Pads - paper or book scale
- Boards - blackboard scale.
- He suggested that rooms might contain hundreds of
computers. - He also thought that mobile devices would need 3
types of communications, tiny-range wireless,
long-range wireless and high-speed wired.
14Progress Toward Wearable Computing
- A weight/visibility spectrum of computing
- Decreasing size gtgtgt Increasing mobility gtgtgt
Decreasing visibility/noticeability -
- Room computer desktop luggable portable
palmtop handheld embedded wearable
invisible?
Alex Bilstein holding the first "luggable"
computer, the 1981 Osborne 1 photo by Jana
Birchum Flexible screen technology developed by
Universal Display. Toshiba's 0.85 inch hard disk
drive can store 4 GB of data.
15Mobility and Usability
- Computing and communications dont naturally suit
mobility. - New physical interfaces beyond the
keyboard/keypad and mouse are needed. - And new software interfaces beyond WIMP (Windows,
Icons, Mouse, pointer) are needed also. - Keeping users mobile and task-focused presents
interesting challenges. - The new motorway signs THINK DON'T PHONE WHILE
DRIVING are a sign of the time.
Left top TINMITH2 - the mobile research AR
platform developed at the Wearable Computer
Laboratory in the University of South Australia.
Above middle wearcam.org and right Chris Baber
at Birmingham
16Mobile Technology and Solutions
- New, and sometimes simple, ideas can make
mobility easier. - And there are some useful new technologies and
products. - Wireless communications, e.g., Wi-Fi, bluetooth,
sensor network - Smart phones and 3G
- RFID tagging technology
- GPS SATNAV, TomTom GO
17 Arent we nearly there?(and what are the
research questions)
18So Arent We There Yet?
- With so much existing technology and research
activity, - arent we nearly there? Is it just a
technology race? - Is the cleverness in putting good technologies
together? - Or better still
- connecting cooperating technologies with
people and the things they do. - An example, from The Media History Timeline
- 1565 The graphite pencil
- 1770 The eraser
- 1858 Eraser fitted to the end of a pencil
A carpenters pencil - the oldest known pencil
found in the roof of a 17th-century German
house. Photo Sandra Suppa, FABER-CASTELL GmbH
Co., Germany
19Design Issues
System-Centred Design Networked/wireless
communications Hardware and software
specification Interfacing Performance and
security Power consumption
- User-Centred Design
- Task analysis and user requirements
- User interface design
- User privacy issues
- Usability and formal testing
- Success in action
- Universal-Centred Design
- (Uncentred Design)
- Ways for experts, users and others to make use of
new and large data sets. - Expanding human knowledge
20Research Questions
- System-centred research question
- How can sensors, systems and data interact and
combine or synergise? - User-centred research question
- How can users manage and interpret all this new
information? - Uncentred research question
- How can all this new information more widely and
usefully inform human knowledge?
21Wearable Systems Functions
- Examples of basic functions of wearable computing
systems.
- Sensing
- Enabling sensing of environment or people in the
environment. - E.g., Activity monitoring, chemical sensing,
position, vital signs. - Possibly providing context-awareness or
ambient-intelligence using combined sense data. - But what about privacy?
- Informatics
- Local and/or remote display and visualization of
information. - Could be locally or remotely sensed, created or
retrieved. - Potential to generate vast amounts of data.
-
- But how can data be made useful and useable to
users, systems and beyond?
- Information Giving
- Mobile access to a static or dynamic database of
information. - Possibly interactive.
- Possibly adaptive.
- Possibly personalizable.
- But what about interfaces?
22 Communications, Sensors, Context and Privacy
23Personal Area Networks
- IEEE 802.15 - Wireless PAN (Personal Area
Network) Standards. - Wi-Fi (IEEE 802.11b and g) and Bluetooth (IEEE
802.15.1) - Sensor area networks (IEEE 802.15.4) and Zigbee
for low-power short range wireless
communications. - Challenges in design and management of
communications in mobile multi-sensing systems
interacting with other mobile multi-sensing
systems and in multi-sensing environments.
24Sensor Examples
- Location via GPS, GSM cell, wi-fi/ network
signal, acoustic, etc. - Proximity RFID tags
- Movement Accelerometers, tilt switches,
gyroscopes - Environmental toxins
- Health Basic vital signs, Glucose (Biosensor)
- Smart Spaces can be created from environments
with embeded networks of sensors. - Smart Dust projects use the smallest sensors
and computing/communicating chips - A biosensor uses biological materials to monitor
the presence of various chemicals in a substance.
- The most widespread commercial biosensor is the
blood glucose biosensor, that uses an enzyme to
break blood glucose down. In so doing it
transfers an electron to an electrode and this is
converted into a measure of blood glucose
concentration.
Berkeley Engineering News Nov 2003, SMALL
PACKAGE The wireless mote integrates radio
frequency communication onto a sensor processing
chip just five square mm in size.
Glucose Biosenor detail www.strath.ac.uk/bioeng/
pg-info/engd/pics.html
25Context Awareness and Ambient Intelligence
- Connecting sensor data can help determine
context. - This can be useful in reducing/avoiding
task-distracting interfaces. - But What do we talk about when we talk about
context? - (P. Dourish, PUC 2004)
- Sensor information in the environment can create
ambient intelligence. - Context Detection with Hidden Markov Model
Analysis of on-body accelerometer sensor data
(A.Schwirtz _at_ Birmingham).
Left Emma Maceys One Thousand Suspended
Moments Right Accelerometer Context Detection
(A. Schwirtz)
26Privacy and Security
- Issues of digital and pervasive privacy and
security are active areas of debate and research. - Privacy is dead, deal with it, Sun MicroSystems
CEO, Scott McNealy. - Excerpts from Privacy The Achilles heel of
Pervasive Computing M.Satyanarayanan - (Editorial of IEEE Pervasive Computing Magazine
on special issue on Security and Privacy, 2003.) - Privacy and security are already thorny problems
in distributed computing. - Inherent conflict between the goal of a
knowledgeable sensing environment with minimal
interface requirement and a ubiquitous, shared,
multi-user space where trust boundaries represent
seams of discontinuity. - Unease associated with pervasive computing
systems might involve location tracking and
smart spaces monitoring user locations and
activities on an almost continual basis. - New pervasive computing infrastructures must
expect new classes of malicious software.
Top (c) Chuck Painter/Stanford News Service-
Ralph Merkle, Martin Hellman, Whitfield Diffie
(1977) - defined a system of safe key
exchange Middle Adi Shamir, Ronald Rivest und
Leonard Adleman - creators of RSA (used in PGP)
27 Examples of Wearable Computing
28Early Wearable Computing Projects
- Early wearable computing work by Boeing to
provide hands-free support for aircraft
construction workers. - Steve Mann and Thad Starner pioneered wearable
computing at MIT, e.g., MIThril a context-aware
jacket platform with health applications. - MITs Affective Computing group also explore
emotions and computing. - The Galvactivator is a glove-like wearable device
that senses the wearer's skin conductivity and
maps its values to a bright LED display.
Increases in skin conductivity across the palm
tend to be good indicators of physiological
arousal
29Pervasive Imaging - Steve Mann
- Steve Mann _at_ Toronto. Pervasive imaging and
free-thinking. - Recommend reading his Leonard paper Existential
Technology and visiting wearcam.org and
www.eyetap.org
Wikepedia Sousveillance as a situationist
critique of surveillance. This wearable wireless
webcam imitates surveillance cameras common in
casinos and department stores.
30HIT Pervasive Computing _at_ Birmingham
- Pervasive Computing
- HIT - Human Interface Technology
- Prof Bob Stone, Chris Baber, Theo Arvanitis
- and
- James Cross, Anthony Schwirtz, James Knight, and
many more
31Pervasive Computing _at_ Birmingham
- Building from an embedded PC104 trial at an
archaeological dig near Rome. - This early prototype was just the first in a
series of systems developed by Dr James
Cross (right). - Wearable computing for field archaeology proved a
very interesting application involving precise
evidence recording in limited time. - Another Birmingham project is a forensic scene of
crime project where wearable/pervaisve computing
aids crime scene report writing.(P. Smith, C.
Baber, S.Woolley, J.Hunter)
323D, VR and Augmented Reality _at_ Birmingham
- Pervasive Computing - computing situated in the
real world. - Virtual Reality - ourselves situated in unreal
world. - Augmented reality - a bit of both. Mapping
virtual (context-informed) information onto
reality. - Prof Bob Stone - 3D and VR - Serious Games
Apllication of game engine technology. - Defence, marine and medical applications.
- E.g., Ship pilot trainer Battlefield surgery
trainer.
Bob Stone - Professor of the new Human Interface
Technology Group.
33Pervasive Computing _at_ Birmingham
- An increasing range of wearable, pervasive,
medical, 3D, VR and augmented reality projects. - Wearable projects in particular focus on best use
of sensor data to reduce/automate interaction
yet avoid wearing the Microsoft Clippy
(C.Baber) - Wearable Computing Conferences
- IEE Wearable computing symposium, IEE Savoy
Place, London - Wearable Computing Workshop, HP, Bristol
- IEE Eurowearable03 _at_ Birmingham
34WEARME _at_ Eurowearable
Example of smart textiles Self-ironing shirt,
Self-cooling jacket, Self-scented dress .
- Puddlejumper Elise Co / MIT Media Lab
- Puddlejumper is a luminescent raincoat that
glows in the rain. Hand-silkscreened
electroluminescent lamps on the front of the
jacket are wired to interior electronics and
conductive water sensors on the back and left
sleeve. When water hits one of the sensors, the
corresponding lamp lights up, creating a
flickering pattern of illumination that mirrors
the rhythm of rainfall.
35CyberJacket
- Wearable Computing _at_ Bristol
- CyberJacket
- A heavy duty Hein Gericke jacket for use in the
field. Equipped with a CardPC, dGPS and GSM
'phone. User interface is audio (speech
recognition TTS) and/or a Jornada hand held
display. - BlazerJet
- For the busy man (or woman) about town,
BlazerJet is equipped with CardPC, GPS, GSM
'phone, a novel Pinger receiver and both the
audio interface and a Jornada 420 palmtop.
36Examples of Personal Medical Systems
37SensVest
- C.Baber, A.Schwirtz and J. Knight
- The Lab of Tomorrow EU project (C.Baber _at_
Birmingham) to enable students to capture and
analyse activity sensor data. - Senses temperature Heart rate (ECG) and activity
via accelerometers.
38AMON - Advanced Telemedical Monitor
- A European project from ETH, Zurich
- Designed to be worn by cardiac outpatients, the
device allows remote monitoring of blood
pressure, pulse, oxygen saturation, body
temperature and 2-channel ECG signals. - AMON A Wearable Medical Computer for High Risk
Patients, - P. Lukowicz, U. Anliker, J. Ward, G. Tröster, E.
Hirt, C. Neufelt, - ISWC 2002 Proceedings of the 6th International
Symposium on Wearable Computers, 7.-10. October
2002, pp 133-34
39WEALTHY
- European-funded Wearable Healthcare System
- Aimed at fulfilling the need to continuously
monitor the patient's vital signs through a
ground-breaking woven sensing interface to be
worn without any discomfort for the user.
http//wealthy-ist.com
40Blood Pressure/Pulse Monitors
- Automatic large LED blood pressure systolic /
diastolic / pulse readout with fuzzy logic. - Automatic inflation deflation
- 48 sets of memory to monitor your progress plus
date / time / average pressure - Requires 2 x AAA batteries.
Tatung http//www.tatung.com/med/product.html
41Wearable Insulin Pumps
- The catheter at the end of the insulin pump is
inserted through a needle into the abdominal fat
of a person with diabetes. - Dosage instructions are entered into the pump's
small computer and the right amount of insulin is
injected in a controlled manner.
Medline Plus
42The Digital Plaster
- A device meant to be embedded in ordinary plaster
that includes sensors for monitoring
health-related metadata such as blood pressure,
temperature and glucose levels. - The digital plaster contains a Sensium silicon
chip, powered by a small battery, which sends
data via a cellphone or PDA to a central computer
database. - If the results show any worrisome signs, patients
and doctors alike would be notified of the change
in the data patterns. They also plan to add a
motion sensor to the device so it could
additionally serve in the role of granny
monitor by detecting things like falls or
complete inactivity.
The Toumaz Digital Plaster
43Womens Health
- Pregnancy and ovulation tests.
- A substantial market potential for personal
health care, but fraught with concerns over
correct usage and interpretation, and the
potential for expensive litigation.
2002 BBC news - new Persona legal cases
44Issues of User Self-Testing
- Need to integrate with existing standards.
- Need to be as reliable as possible yet still
convey level of confidence. - Do mail order tests cause more harm than good?
- Regarding cancer screening tests, the BMA
recently reported that false positive results
and the lack of counselling with results could
mean that mail order tests cause more harm than
good. - Is ignorance preferable to a little knowledge?
45Medic Alerts
- Traditional medic alerts are engraved bracelets
or necklaces bearing simple and (hopefully)
recognisable medical icons. - Important life-critical allergy or other health
data is engraved on the reverse. - There is a huge growth in this market with the
increase in allergies and life-threatening
anaphylaxis. - Also an increasing desire of patients to have and
carry their own medical record information. - New ideas include USB keyring fobs and a large
number of Birmingham University student PDA
creations.
www.MedicalTags.co.uk
www.MedicAlert.org
46Medic Alerts (A Simple Example of Scope)
- Remembering the pencil and eraser example
- can we better connect cooperating sensing,
computing and communicating technologies with
people and the things they do? - There still seems lots of scope for research, for
improvement, and for new products in wearable and
pervasive computing. Particularly, well
connected cooperating systems. - And particularly in personal medical devices.
www.MedicalTags.co.uk
www.MedicAlert.org
47Thank You
- Sandra Woolley
- S.I.Woolley_at_bham.ac.uk
- http//www.eee.bham.ac.uk/woolleysi