DocumentCode :
1271866
Title :
How i quantified myself
Author :
Waltz, Emily
Volume :
49
Issue :
9
fYear :
2012
fDate :
9/1/2012 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage :
42
Lastpage :
47
Abstract :
One warm night last February, I lay down to bed feeling like a lab mouse. A heat-and motion-sensing arm-band gauged my energy expenditure, another activity tracker clipped to my waistband recorded movement, a blood-pressure cuff connected to my iPad squeezed my right arm, and a brainwave-sensing headband would soon monitor my sleep. A scale linked by Bluetooth to an app on my iPad sat on the bathroom floor. With consistent use, these devices would provide a numeric picture of my general health and behaviors. They would give me intimate knowledge of my physical self, with all the information displayed neatly in graphs and charts. Not too many years ago, you had to go to medical specialists to get this kind of biological data. Now, whether your problem is migraines or mood swings, you can keep track of your ailment with a consumer device that costs around US $100. As these healthand-wellness gadgets proliferate, a “quantified self” movement is gaining strength: It´s attracting athletes, fitness buffs, data lovers, hypochondriacs, and people just trying to lose some weight.
Keywords :
biomedical electronics; biomedical equipment; biomedical measurement; activity tracker; biological data; blood-pressure cuff; brainwave-sensing headband; energy expenditure; heat-and motion-sensing; lab mouse; quantified myself; self-measurement gadgets; sleep monitoring; Biomedical monitoring; Medical devices; Temperature measurement; Temperature sensors;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Spectrum, IEEE
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0018-9235
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/MSPEC.2012.6281132
Filename :
6281132
Link To Document :
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