Abstract
The use of health and well-being monitoring technologies has been steadily increasing and such systems can now be found in smart homes, age-friendly workplaces, public spaces, and elsewhere. These monitoring technologies employ a wide variety of off-the-shelf smart sensors and medical devices to support functional, physiological, and behavioral monitoring and to address social interaction aspects of daily life. These systems focus either on specific health-related conditions or on supporting the more general aims of comfort, well-being, and quality of life. However, there remain several technological (interoperability, expandability, etc.) and societal (cost, privacy, etc.) challenges to be addressed before smart biosensor systems are widely adopted.
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