Search results for "Signal quality"
showing 4 items of 4 documents
Photoplethysmography for bovine heat detection: the preliminary results
2020
In this study, we applied photoplethysmography (PPG) as an alternative, convenient, and affordable method for bovine heat detection. Heat detection is an essential part of effective herd reproduction management. Currently, there are many different heat detection techniques, but they can be ineffective or impractical to use. Since heat affects local vulvar blood circulation (resulting in swelling and erythema), photoplethysmography could represent an affordable alternative to detect this bovine phenomenon. In this study, we enrolled 20 animals in heat and other stages of the bovine reproduction cycle. We analyzed the PPG signal in terms of baseline (DC component), power, kurtosis, and erythe…
Photoplethysmography In Dogs And Cats: Selection Of Measurement Sites For Pet Monitor
2018
The PPG measurements of the study Cugmas et al, 2018. Notes.txt include all information about the dataset.
Photoplethysmography in dogs and cats: a selection of alternative measurement sites for a pet monitor.
2018
Objective Photoplethysmography (PPG) is an increasingly popular health and well-being tool for monitoring heart rate and oxygen saturation. Due to the pigmentation and hairiness of dogs and cats, a pulse oximeter is routinely placed solely on the tongue. As this approach is feasible only for pet monitor use during surgical procedures, we investigate PPG signal quality on several other measurement sites that would be better tolerated by conscious animals. Approach Acquired PPG signals are analyzed by four signal quality indices: mean baseline, signal power, kurtosis, and tolerance score. Main results In dogs, the metacarpus and tail can be substituted for oral pulse oximeter placement since …
Comparison of remote photoplethysmography signals acquired by ultra-low noise camera and conventional camera during physiological tests
2017
In present study, remote photoplethysmography signals acquired by ultra-low noise camera and conventional camera were compared during different skin microcirculation provocation tests. The aim of work was to reveal how much of camera dynamic range and noise contribute to blood perfusion signal quality. Results demonstrate comparable capabilities of both cameras for skin perfusion monitoring.