Eardrum‐Inspired Active Sensors for Self‐Powered Cardiovascular System Characterization and Throat‐Attached Anti‐Interference Voice Recognition
Georgia Institute of Technology · Chongqing University · +2 more institutions
Abstract
The first bionic membrane sensor based on triboelectrification is reported for self-powered physiological and behavioral measurements such as local internal body pressures for non-invasive human health assessment. The sensor can also be for self-powered anti-interference throat voice recording and recognition, as well as high-accuracy multimodal biometric authentication, thus potentially expanding the scope of applications in self-powered wearable medical/health monitoring, interactive input/control devices as well as accurate, reliable, and less intrusive biometric authentication systems. As a service to our authors and readers, this journal provides supporting information supplied by the authors. Such…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 26.00
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 44
Authors
11Topics & keywords
- Biometrics
- Wearable computer
- Authentication (law)
- Scope (computer science)
- Computer science
- Human–computer interaction
- Interference (communication)
- Asynchronous communication