Measuring hot flash occurrence using skin color (skin_color_monitor)
Project Overview
Menopausal women have hot flashes, which cause discomfort, sleep disturbance, and work interruption. Therapeutic drug testing requires objective measurement of hot flashes.
The project is to develop a miniature skin color sensor to record hot flashes, or, to say precisely, a device to detect a change in skin color, as skin turns red during hotflash.
The working principle of the device base on the difference of light absorbed by different colors: black absorbs light the most while white reflects most of the light. The difference of light reflected can be picked up as an electric signal and recorded.
Files
- PDS(10/17) (October 17, 2007)
- Mid-Semester Presentation (October 19, 2007)
- Mid-Semester Report (October 24, 2007)
- Final Poster (December 11, 2007)
- Final Report (December 12, 2007)
Contact Information
Team Members
- Jack Ho - Team Leader
- Patrick Kurkiewicz - Communicator
- Brian Ginter - BSAC
- Joseph Yuen - BWIG
Advisor and Client
- Prof. William Murphy - Advisor
- Prof. John Webster - Client
Related Projects
- Fall 2008: Measuring hot flash occurrence using skin color
- Spring 2008: Skin Color Sensor to Monitor Hot Flashes
- Fall 2007: Measuring hot flash occurrence using skin color (skin_color_monitor)