Body Sensor Networks

Front Cover
Guang-Zhong Yang
Springer Science & Business Media, Dec 5, 2007 - Computers - 494 pages
Advances in science and medicine are closely linked; they are characterised by episodic imaginative leaps, often with dramatic effects on mankind and beyond. The advent of body sensor networks represents such a leap. The reason for this stems from the fact that all branches of modern medicine, ranging from prevention to complex intervention, rely heavily on early, accurate, and complete diagnosis followed by close monitoring of the results. To date, attempts at doing this consisted of intermittent contact with the individual concerned, producing a series of snapshots at personal, biochemical, mechanical, cellular, or molecular levels. This was followed by making a series of assumptions which inevitably resulted in a distortion of the real picture. Although the human genome project has shown that we are all “equal”, it confirmed the fact that each one of us has unique features at many levels, some of which include our susceptibility to disease and a particular response to many external stimuli, medicines, or procedures. This has resulted in the concept of personalised medicines or procedures promised to revolutionise our approach to healthcare. To achieve this, we need accurate individualised information obtained at many levels in a continuous fashion. This needs to be accomplished in a sensitive, respectful, non-invasive manner which does not interfere with human dignity or quality of life, and more importantly it must be affordable and cost-effective.

From inside the book

Contents

5
20
References
34
2
41
22223
82
Protein Engineering for Biosensors 89
88
Wireless Communication
117
References
143
References
180
References
281
References
326
Autonomic Sensing
333
References
366
References
393
Appendix A Wireless Sensor Development Platforms
403
Conclusions
418
BSN Development Kit
441

Energy Scavenging
183
References
216
References
236
MultiSensor Fusion
239
TinyOS
451
BSN Programming Guide
468
Conclusions
478
Copyright

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