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Results for "wearable devices"

Enabling Practical and Rich User Digitization

MBZUAI ·

A computer science vision involves computing devices becoming proactive assistants, enhancing various aspects of life through user digitization. Current devices provide coarse digital representations of users, but there's significant potential for improvement. Karan, a Ph.D. candidate at CMU, develops technologies for consumer devices to capture richer user representations without sacrificing practicality. Why it matters: Advancements in user digitization can lead to improved extended reality experiences, health tracking, and more productive work environments, enhancing the utility of consumer devices.

Paper Watch and Artificial Paper Skin Sensors

KAUST ·

KAUST researchers created a flexible temperature array by drawing a resistor structure with a silver conductive ink pen on Post-it paper. The array functions as an artificial skin sensor. The device demonstrates a low-cost approach to wearable sensors. Why it matters: This research offers a path to scalable and accessible sensor technology for health monitoring and other applications in the region.

Enhancing Construction Worker Safety in Extreme Heat: A Machine Learning Approach Utilizing Wearable Technology for Predictive Health Analytics

arXiv ·

Researchers in Saudi Arabia developed and evaluated deep learning models, specifically LSTM and attention-based LSTM, to predict heat stress among construction workers. The study monitored physiological data like heart rate and oxygen saturation from 19 workers using Garmin Vivosmart 5 smartwatches. The attention-based model achieved 95.40% testing accuracy with superior precision, recall, and F1 scores of 0.982, significantly outperforming the baseline. Why it matters: This approach offers a proactive, data-driven solution for enhancing worker safety in extreme heat conditions, particularly relevant for the construction sector in the Middle East.