A Domain-Specific approach for Programming Wireless Body Sensor Network Systems
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Gravina, Raffaele
Palopoli, Luigi
Fortino, Giancarlo
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Dottorato di Ricerca in Ingegneria dei Sistemi e Informatica XXIV Ciclo, a.a. 2011; The progress of science and medicine during the last years has contributed
to signi cantly increase the average life expectancy. The increase of elderly
population will have a large impact especially on the health care system. Furthermore,
especially in more developed countries, there is an always growing
interest in maintaining, and improving the quality of life.
Wireless Body Sensor Networks (BSNs) can contribute to improve the
quality of health care services. BSNs involve wireless wearable physiological
sensors applied to the human body for strictly medical and non medical
purposes. They can enhance many human-centered application domains such
as e-Health, sport and wellness, and even social applications such as physical/
virtual social interactions.
However, there are still open issues that limit their wide di usion in real
life; primarily, the programming complexity of these systems, due to lack of
high-level software abstractions, and to hardware constraints of wearable devices.
In contrast to low-level programming and general-purpose middleware,
domain-speci c frameworks are an emerging programming paradigm designed
to ful ll the lack of suitable BSN programming support.
With this aim, this thesis proposes a novel domain-speci c approach for
programming signal-processing intensive BSN applications. The de nition of
this approach resulted in a domain-speci c programming framework named
SPINE (Signal Processing in Node Environment) which is one important contribution
of this thesis, along with other interesting contributions derived from
enhancements and variants to the main proposal. Additionally, to provide
validation and performance evaluation of the proposed approach, a number
of BSN applications (including human activity monitoring, physical energy
expenditure estimation, emotional stress detection, and step-counting) have
been developed atop SPINE. These research prototypes showed the e ectiveness
and e ciency of the proposed approach and improved their respective
state-of-the-art. Finally, a Platform-Based Design (PBD) methodology, which
is widely adopted for the design of traditional embedded systems, is proposed
for the design of BSN systems.; Università della CalabriaSoggetto
Reti wireless; Sensori
Relazione
ING-INF/05;