Abstract

Remote physiological monitoring has become increasingly important in improving quality of life, with remote photoplethysmography (RPPG) being a popular choice. This paper introduces an envelope–based method for RPPG channels to improve wave morphology of the collected signal based on the reference signal from finger PPG. Using a model consistent with physiological and optical principles, the authors divided the signal into linear superpositions, comprising pulse, constant, and disturbance components. The correlation coefficients were used to calculate a linear combination of Red–Green–Blue (RGB) channels to approximate the envelope shape of the reference PPG signal. Experiments with different light intensities and stability were designed to compare the envelope approximation ability and robustness of the proposed method with some common methods. Analysis of variance demonstrated the stable performance of the envelopment–based approach in most cases. Additionally, it improved the morphology of the Green (G) channel, including changing trends and directions, adjusting wave sizes, reducing noise, and reinforcing details of the single waveform. The envelope–based linear model approach has the ability to flexibly improve RPPG signals, which helps RPPG play a full role in many fields such as medicine.

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