Wearable Respiratory Data During Pulmonary Rehabilitation Exercises (Magnetic Field-Based and Piezoelectric-Based Wearables Against Airflow Transducer)
Dataset for validation of a new magnetic field-based wearable breathing sensor (MAG), which uses the movement of the chest wall as a surrogate measure of respiratory activity. Based on the principle of variation in magnetic field strength with the distance from the source, this system explores Hall...
Gespeichert in:
Hauptverfasser: | , , , , , , , , , |
---|---|
Format: | Dataset |
Sprache: | eng |
Online-Zugang: | Volltext bestellen |
Tags: |
Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
|
Zusammenfassung: | Dataset for validation of a new magnetic field-based wearable breathing sensor (MAG), which uses the movement of the chest wall as a surrogate measure of respiratory activity. Based on the principle of variation in magnetic field strength with the distance from the source, this system explores Hall effect sensing, paired with a permanent magnet, embedded in a chest strap.The proposed wearable device was evaluated using the gold-standard as a reference system - an airflow transducer - and compared to a commonly used wearable device with analogous usability but with a different working principle - a piezoelectric-based sensor (PZT) embedded in a chest strap.A total of 16 healthy participants (M/F parity) performed 15 different activities, representative of pulmonary rehabilitation exercises, simultaneously using the three devices. The dataset was created for evaluation of the proposed device based on detection of flow reversal events, as well as fiducials detection latency.The 15 activities executed by the participants were: standing normal breathing (STNB); seated normal breathing (SNB); seated guided-breathing (SGB); normal/deep-alternated breathing (MIXB); march (MCH); squat (SQT); adduction/abduction of the left/right arm (AAL/AAR); adduction/abduction of the left/right leg (ALL/ALR); upwards (overhead) left/right arm extension (UAL/UAR); shoulder elevation (SE); side stretch (SS); and seated trunk rotation (TR). |
---|---|
DOI: | 10.21227/tkxr-xf96 |