Estimating Carotid Pulse and Breathing Rate from Near-infrared Video of the Neck
Weixuan Chen, Javier Hernandez, Rosalind W. Picard

TL;DR
This paper presents a low-cost, non-contact method using near-infrared video to accurately estimate carotid pulse and breathing rate from the neck, functioning effectively in various lighting conditions.
Contribution
It introduces a novel approach combining a skin reflection model, template matching, PCA, and Hidden Markov Models for physiological measurement from NIR video.
Findings
Achieved mean absolute error of 0.36 bpm for heart rate
Achieved mean absolute error of 0.24 bpm for breathing rate
Effective in both bright and dark environments
Abstract
Objective: Non-contact physiological measurement is a growing research area that allows capturing vital signs such as heart rate (HR) and breathing rate (BR) comfortably and unobtrusively with remote devices. However, most of the approaches work only in bright environments in which subtle photoplethysmographic and ballistocardiographic signals can be easily analyzed and/or require expensive and custom hardware to perform the measurements. Approach: This work introduces a low-cost method to measure subtle motions associated with the carotid pulse and breathing movement from the neck using near-infrared (NIR) video imaging. A skin reflection model of the neck was established to provide a theoretical foundation for the method. In particular, the method relies on template matching for neck detection, Principal Component Analysis for feature extraction, and Hidden Markov Models for data…
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