DocumentCode :
722837
Title :
Non-contact measurement of respiratory and heart rates using a CMOS camera-equipped infrared camera for prompt infection screening at airport quarantine stations
Author :
Nakayama, Yosuke ; Guanghao Sun ; Abe, Shigeto ; Matsui, Takemi
Author_Institution :
Grad. Sch. of Syst. Design, Tokyo Metropolitan Univ., Hino, Japan
fYear :
2015
fDate :
12-14 June 2015
Firstpage :
1
Lastpage :
4
Abstract :
Severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) was first reported in 2003 and quickly spread around the world. Therefore, many international airport quarantine stations launched fever-based screening to detect infected passengers using infrared (IR) cameras for preventing global pandemics. However, a screening method based on fever alone can be insufficient for detecting infected individuals because many factors, such as antipyretics uptake, can affect it. Our previous studies using compact radar revealed that simultaneous measurement of facial skin temperature and respiratory and heart rates drastically improved the sensitivity of infection screening compared to that achieved by facial skin temperature measurement alone. Using a CMOS camera-equipped IR camera (CMOS-IR camera), which most Japanese International Airports have adopted, we developed an enhanced thermal/RGB image processing method for non-contact measurement of facial skin temperature, and respiratory and heart rates. We conducted the image processing on the thermal/RGB image-fusion mode in real time; we determined the respiratory rate by thermal images of the IR camera and the heart rate by the RGB images of the CMOS camera. Using a CMOS-IR camera, we measured respiratory and heart rates of ten healthy subjects (23 ± 1 years), and compared them with those determined by a contact-type respiratory effort belt and electrocardiograms (ECGs) as references. The respiratory and heart rates obtained from the CMOS-IR camera exhibited strong positive correlations with those derived from the references, a respiratory effort belt: r = 0.99, p <; 0.01; ECG: r = 0.96, p <; 0.01, whereas the axillary temperature indicated a moderate degree of correlation to facial skin temperature (r = 0.6). Adopting this method into conventional CMOS-IR camera image processing at international airport quarantines will achieve higher infection screening sensitivity.
Keywords :
CMOS image sensors; airports; biomedical equipment; biomedical optical imaging; biothermics; cameras; cardiology; diseases; epidemics; feature extraction; image fusion; infrared imaging; medical image processing; pneumodynamics; real-time systems; skin; CMOS camera-equipped infrared camera; CMOS-IR camera image processing; ECG; SARS spreading; antipyretics uptake effect; axillary temperature; compact radar; contact-type respiratory effort belt; electrocardiogram; fever-based screening; global pandemic prevention; infected passenger detection; infection screening sensitivity; international airport quarantine station; noncontact facial skin temperature measurement; noncontact heart rate measurement; noncontact respiratory rate measurement; prompt infection screening; real time image processing; severe acute respiratory syndrome; thermal-RGB image fusion mode; thermal-RGB image processing; Airports; Belts; Cameras; Heart rate; Skin; Temperature measurement; Temperature sensors; Thermal image processing; infection screening; non-contact; vital signs;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Computational Intelligence and Virtual Environments for Measurement Systems and Applications (CIVEMSA), 2015 IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Shenzhen
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/CIVEMSA.2015.7158595
Filename :
7158595
Link To Document :
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