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Development of a Multisensory Wearable System for Monitoring Cigarette Smoking Behavior in Free-Living Conditions

This paper presents the development and validation of a novel multi-sensory wearable system (Personal Automatic Cigarette Tracker v2 or PACT2.0) for monitoring of cigarette smoking in free-living conditions. The contributions of the PACT2.0 system are: (1) the implementation of a complete sensor sui...

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Autores principales: Imtiaz, Masudul Haider, Ramos-Garcia, Raul I., Senyurek, Volkan Yusuf, Tiffany, Stephen, Sazonov, Edward
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5877467/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29607211
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/electronics6040104
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author Imtiaz, Masudul Haider
Ramos-Garcia, Raul I.
Senyurek, Volkan Yusuf
Tiffany, Stephen
Sazonov, Edward
author_facet Imtiaz, Masudul Haider
Ramos-Garcia, Raul I.
Senyurek, Volkan Yusuf
Tiffany, Stephen
Sazonov, Edward
author_sort Imtiaz, Masudul Haider
collection PubMed
description This paper presents the development and validation of a novel multi-sensory wearable system (Personal Automatic Cigarette Tracker v2 or PACT2.0) for monitoring of cigarette smoking in free-living conditions. The contributions of the PACT2.0 system are: (1) the implementation of a complete sensor suite for monitoring of all major behavioral manifestations of cigarette smoking (lighting events, hand-to-mouth gestures, and smoke inhalations); (2) a miniaturization of the sensor hardware to enable its applicability in naturalistic settings; and (3) an introduction of new sensor modalities that may provide additional insight into smoking behavior e.g., Global Positioning System (GPS), pedometer and Electrocardiogram(ECG) or provide an easy-to-use alternative (e.g., bio-impedance respiration sensor) to traditional sensors. PACT2.0 consists of three custom-built devices: an instrumented lighter, a hand module, and a chest module. The instrumented lighter is capable of recording the time and duration of all lighting events. The hand module integrates Inertial Measurement Unit (IMU) and a Radio Frequency (RF) transmitter to track the hand-to-mouth gestures. The module also operates as a pedometer. The chest module monitors the breathing (smoke inhalation) patterns (inductive and bio-impedance respiratory sensors), cardiac activity (ECG sensor), chest movement (three-axis accelerometer), hand-to-mouth proximity (RF receiver), and captures the geo-position of the subject (GPS receiver). The accuracy of PACT2.0 sensors was evaluated in bench tests and laboratory experiments. Use of PACT2.0 for data collection in the community was validated in a 24 h study on 40 smokers. Of 943 h of recorded data, 98.6% of the data was found usable for computer analysis. The recorded information included 549 lighting events, 522/504 consumed cigarettes (from lighter data/self-registered data, respectively), 20,158/22,207 hand-to-mouth gestures (from hand IMU/proximity sensor, respectively) and 114,217/112,175 breaths (from the respiratory inductive plethysmograph (RIP)/bio-impedance sensor, respectively). The proposed system scored 8.3 ± 0.31 out of 10 on a post-study acceptability survey. The results suggest that PACT2.0 presents a reliable platform for studying of smoking behavior at the community level.
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spelling pubmed-58774672018-03-30 Development of a Multisensory Wearable System for Monitoring Cigarette Smoking Behavior in Free-Living Conditions Imtiaz, Masudul Haider Ramos-Garcia, Raul I. Senyurek, Volkan Yusuf Tiffany, Stephen Sazonov, Edward Electronics (Basel) Article This paper presents the development and validation of a novel multi-sensory wearable system (Personal Automatic Cigarette Tracker v2 or PACT2.0) for monitoring of cigarette smoking in free-living conditions. The contributions of the PACT2.0 system are: (1) the implementation of a complete sensor suite for monitoring of all major behavioral manifestations of cigarette smoking (lighting events, hand-to-mouth gestures, and smoke inhalations); (2) a miniaturization of the sensor hardware to enable its applicability in naturalistic settings; and (3) an introduction of new sensor modalities that may provide additional insight into smoking behavior e.g., Global Positioning System (GPS), pedometer and Electrocardiogram(ECG) or provide an easy-to-use alternative (e.g., bio-impedance respiration sensor) to traditional sensors. PACT2.0 consists of three custom-built devices: an instrumented lighter, a hand module, and a chest module. The instrumented lighter is capable of recording the time and duration of all lighting events. The hand module integrates Inertial Measurement Unit (IMU) and a Radio Frequency (RF) transmitter to track the hand-to-mouth gestures. The module also operates as a pedometer. The chest module monitors the breathing (smoke inhalation) patterns (inductive and bio-impedance respiratory sensors), cardiac activity (ECG sensor), chest movement (three-axis accelerometer), hand-to-mouth proximity (RF receiver), and captures the geo-position of the subject (GPS receiver). The accuracy of PACT2.0 sensors was evaluated in bench tests and laboratory experiments. Use of PACT2.0 for data collection in the community was validated in a 24 h study on 40 smokers. Of 943 h of recorded data, 98.6% of the data was found usable for computer analysis. The recorded information included 549 lighting events, 522/504 consumed cigarettes (from lighter data/self-registered data, respectively), 20,158/22,207 hand-to-mouth gestures (from hand IMU/proximity sensor, respectively) and 114,217/112,175 breaths (from the respiratory inductive plethysmograph (RIP)/bio-impedance sensor, respectively). The proposed system scored 8.3 ± 0.31 out of 10 on a post-study acceptability survey. The results suggest that PACT2.0 presents a reliable platform for studying of smoking behavior at the community level. 2017-11-28 2017-12 /pmc/articles/PMC5877467/ /pubmed/29607211 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/electronics6040104 Text en Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Imtiaz, Masudul Haider
Ramos-Garcia, Raul I.
Senyurek, Volkan Yusuf
Tiffany, Stephen
Sazonov, Edward
Development of a Multisensory Wearable System for Monitoring Cigarette Smoking Behavior in Free-Living Conditions
title Development of a Multisensory Wearable System for Monitoring Cigarette Smoking Behavior in Free-Living Conditions
title_full Development of a Multisensory Wearable System for Monitoring Cigarette Smoking Behavior in Free-Living Conditions
title_fullStr Development of a Multisensory Wearable System for Monitoring Cigarette Smoking Behavior in Free-Living Conditions
title_full_unstemmed Development of a Multisensory Wearable System for Monitoring Cigarette Smoking Behavior in Free-Living Conditions
title_short Development of a Multisensory Wearable System for Monitoring Cigarette Smoking Behavior in Free-Living Conditions
title_sort development of a multisensory wearable system for monitoring cigarette smoking behavior in free-living conditions
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5877467/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29607211
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/electronics6040104
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