A glasses-type wearable device for monitoring the patterns of food intake and facial activity
Adult
Male
Eye Movements
Facial Muscles
Article
Eating
Wearable Electronic Devices
03 medical and health sciences
Eyeglasses
0302 clinical medicine
Head Movements
Remote Sensing Technology
Humans
Mastication
Speech
Female
DOI:
10.1038/srep41690
Publication Date:
2017-01-30T10:18:12Z
AUTHORS (6)
ABSTRACT
AbstractHere we present a new method for automatic and objective monitoring of ingestive behaviors in comparison with other facial activities through load cells embedded in a pair of glasses, named GlasSense. Typically, activated by subtle contraction and relaxation of a temporalis muscle, there is a cyclic movement of the temporomandibular joint during mastication. However, such muscular signals are, in general, too weak to sense without amplification or an electromyographic analysis. To detect these oscillatory facial signals without any use of obtrusive device, we incorporated a load cell into each hinge which was used as a lever mechanism on both sides of the glasses. Thus, the signal measured at the load cells can detect the force amplified mechanically by the hinge. We demonstrated a proof-of-concept validation of the amplification by differentiating the force signals between the hinge and the temple. A pattern recognition was applied to extract statistical features and classify featured behavioral patterns, such as natural head movement, chewing, talking, and wink. The overall results showed that the average F1 score of the classification was about 94.0% and the accuracy above 89%. We believe this approach will be helpful for designing a non-intrusive and un-obtrusive eyewear-based ingestive behavior monitoring system.
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