Human skin acts as the largest interface between the human body and the external environment, continuously interrogated by the central nervous system. The skin converts data flows from the inside to the outer environment and vice versa. Such interaction can be boosted by epidermal radio-sensors providing portions of a second skin suitable to capture and transmit physiologic parameters to environmental nodes as well to measure physical features of objects, thus restoring or augmenting the human senses. This contribution resumes epidermal antennas for application to the above two kinds of interactions for the measurements of temperature and breath and for the augmentation of the object perception.
Caccami, M.c., Miozzi, C., Greco, V., Marrocco, G. (2018). Epidermal radio-sensors for wireless detection of physiological parameters and sense augmentation. In 12th European Conference on Antennas and Propagation (EuCAP 2018). Institution of Engineering and Technology [10.1049/cp.2018.0976].
Epidermal radio-sensors for wireless detection of physiological parameters and sense augmentation
Caccami, M. C.;Marrocco, G.
2018-04-01
Abstract
Human skin acts as the largest interface between the human body and the external environment, continuously interrogated by the central nervous system. The skin converts data flows from the inside to the outer environment and vice versa. Such interaction can be boosted by epidermal radio-sensors providing portions of a second skin suitable to capture and transmit physiologic parameters to environmental nodes as well to measure physical features of objects, thus restoring or augmenting the human senses. This contribution resumes epidermal antennas for application to the above two kinds of interactions for the measurements of temperature and breath and for the augmentation of the object perception.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.