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Testing sensors for body surface vibration measurements

Authors :
Richard H. Sandler
Thomas J. Royston
D. Jones
Hansen A. Mansy
Source :
Proceedings of the First Joint BMES/EMBS Conference. 1999 IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology 21st Annual Conference and the 1999 Annual Fall Meeting of the Biomedical Engineering Society (Cat. No.99CH37015).
Publication Year :
2003
Publisher :
IEEE, 2003.

Abstract

A system was constructed to test the performance of transducers for the detection of body surface vibrations. A phantom was manufactured of a gel that approximates properties of soft tissue and the different sensors were used to measure the vibrations at the model surface. One speaker was buried in the phantom to introduce a simulated signal, and another introduced simulated ambient room noise. The frequency-dependent sensor sensitivity to the input signal and ambient noise was investigated for six different sensor types. The laser Doppler sensor provided non-contact measurement with no surface loading, and was chosen as the reference sensor. The sensitivity of all sensors to ambient noise was satisfactory with the all-coupled sensor being most sensitive. The electronic stethoscope had the advantages of high sensitivity to the desired signal, low sensitivity to ambient noise and low cost.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Proceedings of the First Joint BMES/EMBS Conference. 1999 IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology 21st Annual Conference and the 1999 Annual Fall Meeting of the Biomedical Engineering Society (Cat. No.99CH37015)
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........11967ba1f6b3d7a8535bef9f4df352c9
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1109/iembs.1999.803955