Current Directions in Biomedical Engineering (Sep 2016)

Portable auricular device for real-time swallow and chew detection

  • Steimer Konrad C.,
  • Zimmermann Christoph,
  • Zeilfelder Jennifer,
  • Pylatiuk Christian,
  • Stork Wilhelm

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1515/cdbme-2016-0031
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. 1
pp. 129 – 133

Abstract

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Monitoring a person’s nutritional consumption is costly and complex. To solve this problem a new technique is proposed to draw conclusions of a person’s food intake. The air pressure signal, recorded in the external acoustic meatus, is used to detect swallow and chew events. A portable device has been developed to record this pressure signal. Due to the constraint of running on a low-power microcontroller, real-time algorithms, used in pattern and speech recognition, were used to develop methods to automatically detect swallow and chew events. A binary classifier was trained by means of manually annotated data sets. Direct comparisons with state of the art technology and tests with several subjects are provided for evaluation purposes.

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