Sensors (May 2024)

Evaluation of Lateral Radar Positioning for Vital Sign Monitoring: An Empirical Study

  • Lars Hornig,
  • Benedek Szmola,
  • Wiebke Pätzold,
  • Jan Paul Vox,
  • Karen Insa Wolf

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/s24113548
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24, no. 11
p. 3548

Abstract

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Vital sign monitoring is dominated by precise but costly contact-based sensors. Contactless devices such as radars provide a promising alternative. In this article, the effects of lateral radar positions on breathing and heartbeat extraction are evaluated based on a sleep study. A lateral radar position is a radar placement from which multiple human body zones are mapped onto different radar range sections. These body zones can be used to extract breathing and heartbeat motions independently from one another via these different range sections. Radars were positioned above the bed as a conventional approach and on a bedside table as well as at the foot end of the bed as lateral positions. These positions were evaluated based on six nights of sleep collected from healthy volunteers with polysomnography (PSG) as a reference system. For breathing extraction, comparable results were observed for all three radar positions. For heartbeat extraction, a higher level of agreement between the radar foot end position and the PSG was found. An example of the distinction between thoracic and abdominal breathing using a lateral radar position is shown. Lateral radar positions could lead to a more detailed analysis of movements along the body, with the potential for diagnostic applications.

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