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李明铭larry 发表于 2013-8-6 21:17:47 | 显示全部楼层 |阅读模式
记载身体资料的科技用品,引发了除了创业者之外,广大科学研究者的兴趣,可穿戴科技,被google glass, fitbit, fuelband这些产品带动前进。

目前,台湾大学的研究人员正在研发一种牙齿记录仪,可以发现咳嗽是否由呼吸问题引起,如果正在节食,每天进行了多少咀嚼的详细数据。目前,设备是用线绑在牙齿中来实现,未来,计划嵌入到牙齿中,再加入蓝牙、wifi的功能就能实时同步分析牙齿/口腔数据了。

额,你想含个蓝牙在嘴巴里么?最起码暂时我觉得挺诡异的。



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来源:
economist.com

AS COMPUTERS continually shrink, the era of wearable technologies is nigh. Nike’s FuelBand slips over your wrist to track the amount of exercise you do. Google Glass, being developed by the eponymous internet-search company, will be a head-mounted display similar to a pair of spectacles that can be sported by the always-online. Apple is working on a smartphone that can be worn like a wristwatch. And from Taiwan comes another example: a tooth that monitors what your mouth is up to.


This might seem an odd thing to want to do, but Chu Hao-hua and his colleagues at National Taiwan University believe there are uses for a miniature device capable of “oral activity recognition”—in other words monitoring such things as chewing, drinking, speaking and coughing. In particular, it could have medical applications: recording the amount of coughing caused by respiratory problems, for instance, or tracking how much munching someone does when he is supposed to be on a diet.


To test the idea, Dr Chu and his colleagues built a set of tiny accelerometers, which measure movement. Eight volunteers had one of the devices fixed to a tooth with dental cement. They were then asked to do things like coughing continuously or drinking a bottle of water, while the team took measurements.


The results, to be presented at the International Symposium on Wearable Computers in Zurich on September 11th, show that, as expected, people talk and chew in different ways because their mouths and teeth are different. However, if data about the motion of someone’s mouth are used to train the system, it can recognise what that mouth is doing 94% of the time.


The next step is to make the device easier to wear. One way, at least for those who do not have a full set of natural gnashers, would be to incorporate it into an artificial tooth that might be part of a set of dentures.
At the moment, the sensor is attached to the outside world by a thin wire. This carries electricity in and data out, but it is obviously inconvenient to have to walk around all day with a wire sticking out of your mouth. If it were part of a set of dentures, though, the sensor might be fitted with a small battery that could be charged up overnight, when most wearers of false teeth remove them, and thus not need the wire for power. Data might also be extracted from the tooth at this time. Alternatively, they could be relayed directly from the mouth to a smartphone or some other device, by incorporating a wireless link into the sensor—a Bluetooth one, of course.

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