Follow Slashdot stories on Twitter

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Google Medicine Software

Google Can Turn ANC Earbuds Into a Heart Rate Monitor With No Extra Hardware (9to5google.com) 20

Abner Li reports via 9to5Google: Google today detailed its research into audioplethysmography (APG) that adds heart rate sensing capabilities to active noise canceling (ANC) headphones and earbuds "with a simple software upgrade." Google says the "ear canal [is] an ideal location for health sensing" given that the deep ear artery "forms an intricate network of smaller vessels that extensively permeate the auditory canal."

This audioplethysmography approach works by "sending a low intensity ultrasound probing signal through an ANC headphone's speakers. This signal triggers echoes, which are received via on-board feedback microphones. We observe that the tiny ear canal skin displacement and heartbeat vibrations modulate these ultrasound echoes." A model that Google created works to process that feedback into a heart rate reading, as well as heart rate variability (HRV) measurement. This technique works even with music playing and "bad earbuds seals." However, it was impacted by body motion, and Google countered with a multi-tone approach that serves as a calibration tool to "find the best frequency that measures heart rate, and use only the best frequency to get high-quality pulse waveform."

Google performed two sets of studies with 153 people that found APG "achieves consistently accurate heart rate (3.21% median error across participants in all activity scenarios) and heart rate variability (2.70% median error in inter-beat interval) measurements." Compared to existing HR sensors, it's not impacted by skin tones. Ear canal size and "sub-optimal seal conditions" also do not impact accuracy. Google believes this is a better approach than putting traditional photoplethysmograms (PPG) and electrocardiograms (ECG) sensors, as well as a microcontroller, in headphones/earbuds: "this sensor mounting paradigm inevitably adds cost, weight, power consumption, acoustic design complexity, and form factor challenges to hearables, constituting a strong barrier to its wide adoption."

This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Google Can Turn ANC Earbuds Into a Heart Rate Monitor With No Extra Hardware

Comments Filter:
  • Regardless of whether people actually want their real time health data seen by an advertising monopoly, how many times have we been told to buy Google hardware not because of what it can do but what they say it might do someday?
  • by bill_mcgonigle ( 4333 ) * on Saturday October 28, 2023 @08:57AM (#63961433) Homepage Journal

    We might give Google a hard time here but this is really excellent, innovative work.

    Now let's see if the FDA stalls it from market for ten years.

    • Youâ(TM)ll see ads about your heart rate thatâ(TM)s all that can be guaranteed
      • by chihowa ( 366380 )

        Yeah, anything coming from Google is automatically suspect. "Creepy advertising company finds a new intrusive way to collect more personal user data from deployed products. Shares some of it with users."

        Working on cool science and tech for Google must be as frustrating as working for Microsoft Research must be. Do cool research to either have it completely ignored or twisted into some evil money grab.

  • My old Samsung buds had this feature also. So nothing really new here...
  • This sounds energy intensive. Now my earbuds will last 20 minutes?
  • Is is just me or I'm afraid that even if you don't hear it, it could cause vibrations in tympanic membrane and create some motion dead zone filtered noise or cause loss in sensitivity with prolonged exposure..
  • Ok. I have a medical sensor now. It is telling me I am unheathly. I knew that.
    Still cant afford the doctors so it doesnt matter. Waste of battery power.

The relative importance of files depends on their cost in terms of the human effort needed to regenerate them. -- T.A. Dolotta

Working...