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A comparison of wearable heart rate sensors for HRV biofeedback in the wild: an ethnographic study

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Conference paperpeer-review

Published

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A comparison of wearable heart rate sensors for HRV biofeedback in the wild: an ethnographic study. / Umair, Muhammad; Chalabianloo, Niaz; Sas, Corina et al.
2020. Paper presented at 25th annual international CyberPsychology, CyberTherapy & Social Networking Conference, Milan, Italy.

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Conference paperpeer-review

Harvard

Umair, M, Chalabianloo, N, Sas, C & Ersoy, C 2020, 'A comparison of wearable heart rate sensors for HRV biofeedback in the wild: an ethnographic study', Paper presented at 25th annual international CyberPsychology, CyberTherapy & Social Networking Conference, Milan, Italy, 5/06/20.

APA

Umair, M., Chalabianloo, N., Sas, C., & Ersoy, C. (2020). A comparison of wearable heart rate sensors for HRV biofeedback in the wild: an ethnographic study. Paper presented at 25th annual international CyberPsychology, CyberTherapy & Social Networking Conference, Milan, Italy.

Vancouver

Umair M, Chalabianloo N, Sas C, Ersoy C. A comparison of wearable heart rate sensors for HRV biofeedback in the wild: an ethnographic study. 2020. Paper presented at 25th annual international CyberPsychology, CyberTherapy & Social Networking Conference, Milan, Italy.

Author

Umair, Muhammad ; Chalabianloo, Niaz ; Sas, Corina et al. / A comparison of wearable heart rate sensors for HRV biofeedback in the wild : an ethnographic study. Paper presented at 25th annual international CyberPsychology, CyberTherapy & Social Networking Conference, Milan, Italy.

Bibtex

@conference{8f0a860ccb8a49c3a75225dcf5a8c488,
title = "A comparison of wearable heart rate sensors for HRV biofeedback in the wild: an ethnographic study",
abstract = "Biofeedback has been consistently used to manage stress and anxiety in clinical and non-clinical settings. Existing research on the use of biosignals to provide sensory feedback has been mostly limited to laboratory settings. In this study, we performed an autoethnographic study to analyze the heart rate variability (HRV) data recorded by two wearable biosignal monitors, the polar H10 heart rate monitor chest strap and Empatica E4 wristband. Data acquisition was conducted during the daily activities of two researchers in real-life settings. Data recorded during the activities and the effects of movement artifacts of each subject were compared qualitatively against each other for HRV stress management.",
keywords = "Biofeedback, Heart rate variability, Polar H10, Empatica E4",
author = "Muhammad Umair and Niaz Chalabianloo and Corina Sas and Cem Ersoy",
year = "2020",
month = jun,
day = "5",
language = "English",
note = "25th annual international CyberPsychology, CyberTherapy & Social Networking Conference, CYPSY25 ; Conference date: 05-06-2020",

}

RIS

TY - CONF

T1 - A comparison of wearable heart rate sensors for HRV biofeedback in the wild

T2 - 25th annual international CyberPsychology, CyberTherapy & Social Networking Conference

AU - Umair, Muhammad

AU - Chalabianloo, Niaz

AU - Sas, Corina

AU - Ersoy, Cem

PY - 2020/6/5

Y1 - 2020/6/5

N2 - Biofeedback has been consistently used to manage stress and anxiety in clinical and non-clinical settings. Existing research on the use of biosignals to provide sensory feedback has been mostly limited to laboratory settings. In this study, we performed an autoethnographic study to analyze the heart rate variability (HRV) data recorded by two wearable biosignal monitors, the polar H10 heart rate monitor chest strap and Empatica E4 wristband. Data acquisition was conducted during the daily activities of two researchers in real-life settings. Data recorded during the activities and the effects of movement artifacts of each subject were compared qualitatively against each other for HRV stress management.

AB - Biofeedback has been consistently used to manage stress and anxiety in clinical and non-clinical settings. Existing research on the use of biosignals to provide sensory feedback has been mostly limited to laboratory settings. In this study, we performed an autoethnographic study to analyze the heart rate variability (HRV) data recorded by two wearable biosignal monitors, the polar H10 heart rate monitor chest strap and Empatica E4 wristband. Data acquisition was conducted during the daily activities of two researchers in real-life settings. Data recorded during the activities and the effects of movement artifacts of each subject were compared qualitatively against each other for HRV stress management.

KW - Biofeedback

KW - Heart rate variability

KW - Polar H10

KW - Empatica E4

M3 - Conference paper

Y2 - 5 June 2020

ER -