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While biosignal analysis has been a mainstay in many medical applications for a number of decades, notably in cardiology, problems remain in the analysis of high volume data and in comparison among time series. Effective comparisons can determine if the state of a particular patient has changed significantly. These comparisons are useful in both long-term and short-term monitoring. Methods will vary...
Recently we have studied the effects of extremely low frequency pulsed electromagnetic fields (ELF-PEMF) on the human biosignals. Electrocardiogram (ECG) and electroencephalogram (EEG) of seventeen healthy volunteers before and after the electromagnetic (EMF) exposure were recorded and analyzed. The root mean square (RMS) values of the recoded data were considered as comparison criteria. EEG results...
Using 4 biometric sensors, including GSR (galvanic skin response), BVP (blood volume pulse), EKG (electro cardio grapy) and EEG (electro encephalon grapy), this paper proposes to attempt to correlate the presentation of relaxing, engaging or stressful content to the subjective measures provided by participants in experiments. Once the participant interacts with content from one of the 3 conditions,...
This paper reports analysis of the limitations of using independent component analysis (ICA) for biosignal analysis especially artefact removal. The possible difficulty is that there are limited number of electrodes (recordings) making it an overcomplete problem (non-square ICA). The other difficulty is the distribution of biosignal being close to Gaussian. These two properties of the signals may...
In the Eastern Alps in Europe, the Dachstein massif with a height of almost 3000 m is an ideal location for investigating the effects of changes in altitude on the human body. Within a few minutes, a cable car facilitates an ascent from 1702 m to 2700 m above sea level, where the partial pressure of oxygen is about 550 mmHg (as compared to 760 mmHg at sea level). In this study ten healthy subjects...
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