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Publications

Publications by João Paulo Cunha

2011

Associating ECG features with firefighter's activities

Authors
Pallauf, J; Gomes, P; Bras, S; Cunha, JPS; Coimbra, M;

Publication
2011 ANNUAL INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE OF THE IEEE ENGINEERING IN MEDICINE AND BIOLOGY SOCIETY (EMBC)

Abstract
In this paper we associate features obtained from ECG signals with the expected levels of stress of real firefighters in action when facing specific events such as fires or car accidents. Five firefighters were monitored using wearable technology collecting ECG signals. Heart rate and heart rate variability features were analyzed in consecutive 5-min intervals during several types of events. A questionnaire was used to rank these types of events according to stress and fatigue and a measure of association was applied to compare this ranking to the ECG features. Results indicate associations between this ranking and both heart rate and heart rate variability features extracted in the time domain. Finally, an example of differences in inter personal responses to stressful events is shown and discussed, motivating future challenges within this research field.

2006

Topographic segmentation and transit time estimation for endoscopic capsule exams

Authors
Coimbra, M; Campos, P; Cunha, JPS;

Publication
2006 IEEE International Conference on Acoustics, Speech and Signal Processing, Vols 1-13

Abstract
The endoscopic capsule is a recent medical technology with important clinical benefits but suffering from a practical handicap: long exam annotation times. This paper shows how support vector machines can be used to segment the gastrointestinal tract into its four major topographic areas, allowing the automatic estimation of the clinically relevant gastric and intestinal transit times. According to medical specialists, this can reduce exam annotation times by up to 12%.

2008

Automated topographic segmentation and transit time estimation in endoscopic capsule exams

Authors
Cunha, JPS; Coimbra, A; Campos, P; Soares, JM;

Publication
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON MEDICAL IMAGING

Abstract
Endoscopic capsule is a recent medical technology with important clinical benefits but suffering from a practical handicap: long exam annotation times. This paper proposes and compares two approaches (Bayesian and support vector machines) that can be used to segment the gastrointestinal tract into its four major topographic areas, allowing the automatic estimation of the clinically relevant gastric and intestinal sections and corresponding transit times. According to medical specialists, this can reduce exam annotation times by up to 12% (15 min). This automatic tool has been integrated into our CapView annotation software that is currently being used by three medical institutions.

2006

MPEG-7 visual descriptors - Contributions for automated feature extraction in capsule endoscopy

Authors
Coimbra, MT; Cunha, JPS;

Publication
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON CIRCUITS AND SYSTEMS FOR VIDEO TECHNOLOGY

Abstract
Recent advances in miniaturization led to the development of what is now called the endoscopic capsule. This small device is swallowed by a patient ana films the whole gastrointestinal tract, allowing the detection of abnormalities. Currently, a doctor typically needs up to two hours to analyze a full exam, so automation is desirable. This paper presents a methodology for measuring the potential of selected visual MPEG-7 descriptors for the task of specific medical event detection such as blood, ulcers. Experiments show that the best results are obtained by the Scalable Color and Homogenous Texture descriptors, especially if only relevant coefficients are used.

2005

Extracting clinical information from endoscopic capsule exams using MPEG-7 visual descriptors

Authors
Coimbra, M; Campos, P; Cunha, JPS;

Publication
IET Seminar Digest

Abstract
The endoscopic capsule is a recent technological breakthrough with high clinical importance. Exam analysis duration is its main setback, requiring an average of two hours from a trained specialist. Automation is required and this paper presents a topographic segmentation tool using low-level features that can reduce annotation times up to 15 minutes per exam. This is accomplished using Bayesian classifiers and MPEG-7 visual descriptors.

2012

Vital responder - Wearable sensing challenges in uncontrolled critical environments

Authors
Coimbra, M; Silva Cunha, JP;

Publication
Lecture Notes of the Institute for Computer Sciences, Social-Informatics and Telecommunications Engineering

Abstract
The goal of the Vital Responder research project is to explore the synergies between innovative wearable technologies, scattered sensor networks, intelligent building technology and precise localization services to provide secure, reliable and effective first-response systems in critical emergency scenarios. Critical events, such as natural disaster or other large-scale emergency, induce fatigue and stress in first responders, such as fire fighters, policemen and paramedics. There are distinct fatigue and stress factors (and even pathologies) that were identified among these professionals. Nevertheless, previous work has uncovered a lack of real-time monitoring and decision technologies that can lead to in-depth understanding of the physiological stress processes and to the development of adequate response mechanisms. Our "silver bullet" to address these challenges is a suite of non-intrusive wearable technologies, as inconspicuous as a t-shirt, capable of gathering relevant information about the individual and disseminating this information through a wireless sensor network. In this paper we will describe the objectives, activities and results of the first two years of the Vital Responder project, depicting how it is possible to address wearable sensing challenges even in very uncontrolled environments. © 2012 ICST Institute for Computer Science, Social Informatics and Telecommunications Engineering.

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