• DocumentCode
    3684253
  • Title

    Annotation and prediction of stress and workload from physiological and inertial signals

  • Author

    Arindam Ghosh;Morena Danieli;Giuseppe Riccardi

  • Author_Institution
    Signals and Interactive Systems Lab, Department of Information Engineering and Computer Science University of Trento, Italy
  • fYear
    2015
  • Firstpage
    1621
  • Lastpage
    1624
  • Abstract
    Continuous daily stress and high workload can have negative effects on individuals´ physical and mental well-being. It has been shown that physiological signals may support the prediction of stress and workload. However, previous research is limited by the low diversity of signals concurring to such predictive tasks and controlled experimental design. In this paper we present 1) a pipeline for continuous and real-life acquisition of physiological and inertial signals 2) a mobile agent application for on-the-go event annotation and 3) an end-to-end signal processing and classification system for stress and workload from diverse signal streams. We study physiological signals such as Galvanic Skin Response (GSR), Skin Temperature (ST), Inter Beat Interval (IBI) and Blood Volume Pulse (BVP) collected using a non-invasive wearable device; and inertial signals collected from accelerometer and gyroscope sensors. We combine them with subjects´ inputs (e.g. event tagging) acquired using the agent application, and their emotion regulation scores. In our experiments we explore signal combination and selection techniques for stress and workload prediction from subjects whose signals have been recorded continuously during their daily life. The end-to-end classification system is described for feature extraction, signal artifact removal, and classification. We show that a combination of physiological, inertial and user event signals provides accurate prediction of stress for real-life users and signals.
  • Keywords
    "Stress","Feature extraction","Biomedical monitoring","Skin","Sensors","Psychology","Physiology"
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society (EMBC), 2015 37th Annual International Conference of the IEEE
  • ISSN
    1094-687X
  • Electronic_ISBN
    1558-4615
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/EMBC.2015.7318685
  • Filename
    7318685