Publication | Closed Access
Bed-based instrumentation for unobtrusive sleep quality assessment in severely disabled autistic children
15
Citations
8
References
2016
Year
Unknown Venue
Sleep DisordersWearable SensorDisabilityWearable TechnologyEducationNeurodiversitySleep-related Breathing DisorderAutismSleep PhysiologyBed Sensor SuiteSleepAssistive TechnologyAutistic ChildrenRehabilitationInsomniaSleep DisorderPhysiologyPediatricsSpecial EducationHealth MonitoringElectrophysiologyDisabled Autistic ChildrenMedicineSleep QualityBed-based Instrumentation
The relationship between sleep quality and daytime wellness and performance in severely disabled, autistic children is not well understood. While polysomnography and, more recently, actigraphy serve as means to obtain sleep assessment data from neurotypical children and adults, these techniques are not well-suited to severely autistic children. This paper presents recent progress on a bed sensor suite that can unobtrusively track physiological and behavioral parameters used to assess sleep quality. Electromechanical films and load cells provide data that yield heart rate, respiration rate, center of position, in-and-out-of-bed activity, and general movement, while thermocouples are used to detect bed-wetting events.
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