Track your heart with your phone
If you’re tired of wearable fitness trackers fighting for space on your wrist, it might not be a problem in the near future: researchers say they can reliably measure your heart and breathing rates just by looking at data from a smartphone sitting in your pocket or bag.
Researchers at MIT are working on a project called BioPhone that derives these biological signals from your smartphone’s accelerometer, which they say can capture the small movements of your body that result from the beating of your heart and rising and falling of your chest. A paper on the work was presented in August.
Javier Hernandez, a research scientist at MIT’s Media Lab and lead author of the paper, says it’s meant to capture this data during moments when you’re not moving much — this makes it easier to pick up such small vibrations without having to account for lots of other bodily movements—and, ideally, the data could be used to help figure out when you’re stressed out, and then help you cope with it. For example, your smartphone might suggest you try some breathing exercises or ask a loved one to give you a call.
The work builds on ongoing efforts by Hernandez and his colleagues to use mobile devices — and wearables, in particular — for measuring heart and breathing rates in less obtrusive ways in hopes of tracking your stress level. A previous project called BioGlass, for instance, used Google Glass to keep tabs on these biological signals by looking at data from the gyroscope, accelerometer, and camera built into the head-worn device. Hernandez says there are still challenges to overcome. He points out that researchers still have to figure out how to measure heart and breathing rates reliably when the smartphone is in different spots, like your back pants pocket versus your T-shirt pocket or a purse, which can change how the biological signals are picked up
Source: www.technologyreview.com