Laurent Giovangrandi, Omer T. Inan, and Gregory T.A. Kovacs

Electrical Engineering Department, Integrated Circuits Lab, Stanford University

Objectives:

New physiological monitors enable the gathering of multi-parametric physiological data such as ECG, respiration, SpO2, activity and even positional data over long periods of time. The ability to quickly analyze, extract and present pertinent information from these large sets of heterogeneous data has become of prime importance. This project aims at developing a software tool (PhysioExplorer) for the analysis and visualization of these physiological data sets, with an emphasis on intuition-building and interactivity.

The objectives are:

Technical Approach:

Results:

The current version of the software has the following capabilities:

In addition, the software package has been used to analyze data from recordings in various extreme environments such as KC-135 parabolic flights and high-altitude expeditions at Licancabur, Chile (analyses performed with the support of Dr. Yvonne D. Cagle, consulting professor of medicine at Stanford University and NASA astronaut, and Dr. Judith L. Swain., former chair of medicine at Stanford University, now director of the Singapore Institute for Clinical Sciences).

 

Figure 1. Snapshot of the main GUI, showing the multiple traces in two different time base, timing and trace controls, and the numeric display. Figure 2. Example of a specialized plot – a power spectrum density plot of heart rate

 

Publications:

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Funding Source(s):

National Center for Space Biological Technologies, NASA

Industrial Collaborators:

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