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MIT Sleep Monitor Can Track People's Sleeping Positions Using Radio Signals (engadget.com) 15

A team of MIT researchers has developed a device that can monitor people's sleep postures without having to use cameras or to stick sensors on their body. Engadget reports: It's a wall-mounted monitor the team dubbed BodyCompass, and it works by analyzing radio signals as they bounce off objects in a room. As the researchers explained, a device that can monitor sleep postures has many potential uses. It could be used to track the progression of Parkinson's disease, for instance, since people with the condition lose their ability to turn over in bed. To differentiate between radio signals bouncing off a body and signals bouncing off random objects in a room, the system focuses on signals that bounce off a person's chest and belly. In other words, the body parts that move while breathing. It then sends those signals to the cloud, so the BodyCompass system can analyze the user's posture.

The team trained their creation's neural network and tested its accuracy by gathering 200 hours of sleep data from 26 subjects who had to wear sensors on their chest and belly in the beginning. They said that after training the device on a week's worth of data, it predicted the subject's correct body posture 94 percent of the time. In the future, BodyCompass could be paired with other devices to prod sleepers to change positions, such as smart mattresses. When that happens, the device could alert people with epilepsy if they've taken a potentially fatal sleeping position, reduce sleep apnea events and notify caregivers to move immobile patients at risk of developing bedsores. It could also help everyone else get a good night's sleep, because we definitely all need it.

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MIT Sleep Monitor Can Track People's Sleeping Positions Using Radio Signals

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  • A cheap, simple fitbit could probably do most of that.

    • No. Not really, it'll give false positives or negatives because you're only monitoring an arm, you can't tell if someone is in a suffocating position.

      The better question is why not use a night vision camera? I've seen kids build these for science fair projects as baby/elderly monitors (I suppose to be used at home or in the hospital) for under $50 (for example using a cheap Melexis 32x24 IR thermography array, night vision pi camera, and raspberry pi plus open source AI and photoplethysmography code). I've

      • Many people are not comfortable with cameras in the bedroom -- visual or thermal. A flat-panel RF antenna in the bedroom is much less intrusive and can monitor breathing rates, sleep apnea, and sleeping posture. It's not perfect for initial sleep studies as it requires a week-long calibration session.

        If the RF signals could also be used to extend the WiFi signals in my house, I would say they have a winner on their hands.

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  • Is with your mother
  • I can see private detectives installing these in hotel rooms when gathering evidence in divorce cases.

  • Even the medical industry is getting in on âoethe cloudâ. If thereâ(TM)s *one* thing I donâ(TM)t want being processed on someone elseâ(TM)s computer, itâ(TM)s my medical info. The device itself sounds like a great idea, but these companies need to ship them with a neural network processing chip built in to do the work.

  • I bet the 5G tinfoil hatters are stoked in this thing
    • Well, the kind conspiracy theorists that see conspiracy theorists everywhere (lurking in the shadows, hiding under the bed), like *you*, already seem to jump on it, to give their current pet hallucination, 5G nutters, that they turned into a thing in the first place, even more spotlight. :P

  • WTF! What is wrong with you??

    Seriously, are you even still human?

  • ... in all of our conference rooms.

  • I wonder if it can monitor and record my penile erections? It might be a selling point at dating websites.
  • Probably won't work on those, who sleep in a Faraday cage.

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