Domain Adaptation for Heart Rate Extraction in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit

2020 
Conventionally, vital sign monitoring for neonatal infants inside the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit is performed via probes affixed to their skin. However, such instruments may cause damage to the epidermis and increase the risk of infection as well as promote discomfort to the infant. As an alternative to traditional means of monitoring heart rate, remote Photoplethysmography techniques have been surging among the scientific community. These techniques have been vastly explored for adult subjects but not for neonatal infants, who would greatly benefit from such applications. This study aims at developing a regular consumer camera-based framework for continuous and contactless extraction of the heart rate in adult subjects in challenging conditions and investigating the tool’s ability to adapt to a new domain which consists of newborn subjects and the real-world conditions of a Neonatal Intensive Care Unit.
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