Abstract
Globally, cigarette smoking is widespread among all ages, and smokers struggle to quit. The design of effective cessation interventions requires an accurate and objective assessment of smoking frequency and smoke exposure metrics. Recently, wearable devices have emerged as a means of assessing cigarette use. However, wearable technologies have inherent limitations, and their sensor responses are often influenced by wearers’ behavior, motion and environmental factors. This paper presents a systematic review of current and forthcoming wearable technologies, with a focus on sensing elements, body placement, detection accuracy, underlying algorithms and applications. Full-texts of 86 scientific articles were reviewed in accordance with the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Review and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) guidelines to address three research questions oriented to cigarette smoking, in order to: (1) Investigate the behavioral and physiological manifestations of cigarette smoking targeted by wearable sensors for smoking detection; (2) explore sensor modalities employed for detecting these manifestations; (3) evaluate underlying signal processing and pattern recognition methodologies and key performance metrics. The review identified five specific smoking manifestations targeted by sensors. The results suggested that no system reached 100% accuracy in the detection or evaluation of smoking-related features. Also, the testing of these sensors was mostly limited to laboratory settings. For a realistic evaluation of accuracy metrics, wearable devices require thorough testing under free-living conditions.
Highlights
Worldwide, tobacco use is a major risk factor for disease and death
The results suggest that the breathing signal may be used to compute smoke exposure metrics
This review identified five specific phenomena related to cigarette smoking that were targeted in the development of wearable sensors
Summary
Tobacco dependence, which is classified in the International Classification of Diseases (ICD-10) [1], causes several types of pulmonary and cardiovascular illness (emphysema, chronic bronchitis, heart attacks and strokes), lethal cancers (lung, colorectal, mouth, larynx, liver, cervix, etc.), and is known to affect the reproductive and immune systems [2,3,4]. It increases the chance of severe health issues like diabetes, duodenal ulcers, loss of appetite, atherosclerosis, age-related macular degeneration and vision loss, premature birth and even miscarriages in pregnant women [5].
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