Abstract

Wireless Body Area Networks (WBANs) consist of small intelligent wireless sensors attached on or implanted in the body. These wireless sensors are responsible for collecting, processing, and transmitting vital information such as: blood pressure, heart rate, respiration rate, electrocardiographic (ECG), electroencephalography (EEG) and oxygenation signals to provide continuous health monitoring with real-time feedback to the users and medical centers. In order to fully exploit the benefits of WBANs for important applications such as Electronic Health (EH), Mobile Health (MH), and Ambulatory Health Monitoring (AHM), the power consumption must be minimized. Since Wireless Nodes (WNs) in WBANs are usually driven by battery power consumption is the most important factor to determine the life of WBANs. This paper presents the applications of Compressed Sensing (CS) theory in WBANs. We have achieved networks with low-sampling rate and low-power consumption on a number of applications. A combination of CS theory to WBANs is the optimal solution for achieving the networks with low-sampling rate and low-power consumption. Our simulation results in ECG signals show that sampling rate can be reduced t0 25% and power consumption to 35% without sacrificing performances by employing the CS theory to WBANs.

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