#Wireless #covid19
Health care, Medicine, Wireless, Health, Sleep, Artificial intelligence

Home-health device uses wireless signals to identify a person it’s seen before

On Jun 16, 2020
@MIT_CSAIL shared
MIT team says its device can monitor up to 40 people's vital signs at once. The hope is that it could help retirement homes anticipate COVID-19 outbreaks. Paper: https://t.co/lK66Zg1n9O More info: https://t.co/gq2b2O31o4 #Wireless #covid19 https://t.co/T9NzVY4wZo
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For several years, an MIT team led by professor Dina Katabi has been working on a device that can measure a person’s vital signs like heart-rate and breathing without any physical contact, by analyzing the wireless signal in the environment. For example, in conjunction with the team’s ...

www.csail.mit.edu
On Jun 16, 2020
@MIT_CSAIL shared
MIT team says its device can monitor up to 40 people's vital signs at once. The hope is that it could help retirement homes anticipate COVID-19 outbreaks. Paper: https://t.co/lK66Zg1n9O More info: https://t.co/gq2b2O31o4 #Wireless #covid19 https://t.co/T9NzVY4wZo
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Home-health device uses wireless signals to identify a person it’s seen before

Home-health device uses wireless signals to identify a person it’s seen before

For several years, an MIT team led by professor Dina Katabi has been working on a device that can measure a person’s vital signs like heart-rate and breathing without any physical contact, ...

Tech from MIT may allow caregivers to monitor coronavirus patients from a distance

Tech from MIT may allow caregivers to monitor coronavirus patients from a distance

The devices use wireless signals to discern breathing patterns of people who do not require hospitalization, but who must be watched closely to ensure their conditions remain stable.

CSAIL device lets doctors monitor COVID-19 patients from a distance

CSAIL device lets doctors monitor COVID-19 patients from a distance

This week a clinical team in Boston has reported being able to monitor a COVID-19 patient remotely, thanks to a device developed at MIT’s Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence ...

Soon your doctor will be able to wirelessly track your health—even through walls

Soon your doctor will be able to wirelessly track your health—even through walls

MIT professor Dina Katabi is building a gadget that can sit in one spot and track everything from breathing to walking, no wearables required.

A clinical team used MIT CSAIL’s AI to remotely monitor a COVID-19 patient

A clinical team used MIT CSAIL’s AI to remotely monitor a COVID-19 patient

A clinical team in Boston used Emerald, an AI monitoring solution incubated at MIT's CSAIL, to remotely monitor a COVID-19 patient.

10 Years on and CNS Summit Continues to Thrive

10 Years on and CNS Summit Continues to Thrive

Staying Relevant In 2009 we watched and were entertained by The Repair of the Hubble Space Telescope We were still knee-deep in the Financial Crisis that began in 2007 The Icelandic banking ...

MIT built a health-tracking sensor that can ‘see’ through walls

MIT built a health-tracking sensor that can ‘see’ through walls

An MIT professor has built a prototype device that can wirelessly track your health -- even through walls -- using a mix of radio signals and machine learning....

MIT using radio waves to monitor patients' health through walls

MIT using radio waves to monitor patients' health through walls

The technology is already used in over 200 homes with healthy people, as well as patients with various conditions.

Looking to technology to avoid doctors’ offices and emergency rooms

Looking to technology to avoid doctors’ offices and emergency rooms

As politicians debate how to improve the nation's expensive - and some would say broken - health care system, Americans are eagerly turning to the latest tech devices in hopes of preventing ...

Implications, Discoveries, Applications

Implications, Discoveries, Applications

A sampling of MIT research underway in the realm of human and machine intelligence

How showing vulnerability helps build a stronger team

How showing vulnerability helps build a stronger team

If you’d like trust to develop in your office, group or team — and who wouldn’t? — the key is sharing your weaknesses, says business writer Daniel Coyle.