Literature DB >> 29082361

Investigation of an Indoor Air Quality Sensor for Asthma Management in Children.

Utkarshani Jaimini1, Tanvi Banerjee1, William Romine2, Krishnaprasad Thirunarayan1, Amit Sheth1, Maninder Kalra3.   

Abstract

Monitoring indoor air quality is critical because Americans spend 93% of their life indoors, and around 6.3 million children suffer from asthma. We want to passively and unobtrusively monitor the asthma patient's environment to detect the presence of two asthma-exacerbating activities: smoking and cooking using the Foobot sensor. We propose a data-driven approach to develop a continuous monitoring-activity detection system aimed at understanding and improving indoor air quality in asthma management. In this study, we were successfully able to detect a high concentration of particulate matter, volatile organic compounds, and carbon dioxide during cooking and smoking activities. We detected 1) smoking with an error rate of 1%; 2) cooking with an error rate of 11%; and 3) obtained an overall 95.7% percent accuracy classification across all events (control, cooking and smoking). Such a system will allow doctors and clinicians to correlate potential asthma symptoms and exacerbation reports from patients with environmental factors without having to personally be present.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Sensor applications; asthma management; cooking; indoor air quality sensor and smoking

Year:  2017        PMID: 29082361      PMCID: PMC5658018          DOI: 10.1109/LSENS.2017.2691677

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  IEEE Sens Lett


  14 in total

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  3 in total

1.  PhD Forum: Multimodal IoT and EMR based Smart Health Application for Asthma Management in Children.

Authors:  Utkarshani Jaimini
Journal:  Proc Int Conf Smart Comput SMARTCOMP       Date:  2017-06-15

2.  Augmented Personalized Health: How Smart Data with IoTs and AI is about to Change Healthcare.

Authors:  Amit Sheth; Utkarshani Jaimini; Krishnaprasad Thirunarayan; Tanvi Banerjee
Journal:  RTSI       Date:  2017-10-12

3.  Feasibility of a Secure Wireless Sensing Smartwatch Application for the Self-Management of Pediatric Asthma.

Authors:  Anahita Hosseini; Chris M Buonocore; Sepideh Hashemzadeh; Hannaneh Hojaiji; Haik Kalantarian; Costas Sideris; Alex A T Bui; Christine E King; Majid Sarrafzadeh
Journal:  Sensors (Basel)       Date:  2017-08-03       Impact factor: 3.576

  3 in total

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