Szczegóły publikacji
Opis bibliograficzny
Adaptive architecture for assisted living systems / P. AUGUSTYNIAK // W: HSI 2013 [Dokument elektroniczny] : 6th international conference on Human System Interaction : June 06–08, 2013, Sopot, Poland : conference proceedings. — Wersja do Windows. — Dane tekstowe. — [Piscataway] : IEEE, cop. 2013. — 1 dysk optyczny. — e-ISBN: 978-1-4673-5636-7. — S. [1–8]. — Wymagania systemowe: Adobe Reader ; napęd CD-ROM. — Bibliogr. s. [7–8], Abstr. — W bazie Web of Science wersja drukowana wydana w ramach serii: Conference on Human System Interaction ; ISSN 2158-2246 ; ISBN 978-1-4673-5637-4; ISBN 978-1-4673-5635-0. — S. 562-569
Autor
Słowa kluczowe
Dane bibliometryczne
| ID BaDAP | 77842 |
|---|---|
| Data dodania do BaDAP | 2013-11-30 |
| DOI | 10.1109/HSI.2013.6577881 |
| Rok publikacji | 2013 |
| Typ publikacji | materiały konferencyjne (aut.) |
| Otwarty dostęp | |
| Konferencja | Human System Interaction 2013 |
Abstract
Recent achievements of telemedicine and surveillance techniques open new challenges for development of assisted living systems for elderly or disabled. This paper presents an universal approach to designing of multimodal health monitoring systems with regard to a paradigm of ubiquitous and personalized medicine. The design combines advantages of intelligent reprogrammable sensors, flexibility of reconfigurable networks built on human body area or embedded in building infrastructures and automatic, person-dependent decision making based on presumptions and experience represented in artificial intelligence. Considering these key features leads to a system design suitable for majority of human surveillance purposes including home care, hospices, rehabilitation and sport training. The paper also presents a prototype system designed accordingly to proposed rules and tested in some experimental setups intended to simulate volunteers' homes. The results confirm that the system adapts to environment-specific relations, provides seamless monitoring with no limit of indoor and outdoor mobility and adapts to subject's habits in recognition of normal, suspected and dangerous events.