Title :
Reliable and Energy-Efficient Communications for Wireless Biomedical Implant Systems
Author :
Ntouni, Georgia D. ; Lioumpas, Athanasios S. ; Nikita, Konstantina S.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Nat. Tech. Univ. of Athens, Athens, Greece
Abstract :
Implant devices are used to measure biological parameters and transmit their results to remote off-body devices. As implants are characterized by strict requirements on size, reliability, and power consumption, applying the concept of cooperative communications to wireless body area networks offers several benefits. In this paper, we aim to minimize the power consumption of the implant device by utilizing on-body wearable devices, while providing the necessary reliability in terms of outage probability and bit error rate. Taking into account realistic power considerations and wireless propagation environments based on the IEEE P802.l5 channel model, an exact theoretical analysis is conducted for evaluating several communication scenarios with respect to the position of the wearable device and the motion of the human body. The derived closed-form expressions are employed toward minimizing the required transmission power, subject to a minimum quality-of-service requirement. In this way, the complexity and power consumption are transferred from the implant device to the on-body relay, which is an efficient approach since they can be easily replaced, in contrast to the in-body implants.
Keywords :
biomedical telemetry; body area networks; body sensor networks; error statistics; probability; prosthetics; IEEE P802.l5 channel model; biological parameters; bit error rate; closed-form expressions; communication scenarios; complexity; cooperative communications; energy-efficient communications; human body motion; implant devices; in-body implant; minimum quality-of-service requirement; on-body relay; on-body wearable devices; outage probability; power consumption; realistic power considerations; reliability; reliable communications; remote off-body devices; size; theoretical analysis; transmission power; wearable device position; wireless biomedical implant systems; wireless body area networks; wireless propagation environments; Body area networks; Channel models; Implants; Quality of service; Reliability; Wearable computers; Wireless communication; Biomedical implants; IEEE P802.15 channel model; power consumption; reliability; wireless body area network (WBAN);
Journal_Title :
Biomedical and Health Informatics, IEEE Journal of
DOI :
10.1109/JBHI.2014.2300151