Automating Personal Safety With Wearable Smart Jewelry
April 19, 2018 | The University of Alabama in HuntsvilleEstimated reading time: 3 minutes
Researchers at the University of Alabama at Birmingham are utilizing technology to create a pragmatic solution for physical or sexual assault prevention.
“A major challenge to assault prevention is that, during an assault, victims often do not have an easily accessible way to call for help,” said Ragib Hasan, Ph.D., associate professor of computer science in the UAB College of Arts and Sciences. “Whether calling 911 or using an emergency alert app or device, each of these tools requires users to press a button in order to call for help. That is often not possible while a violent act is taking place or if a person is unconscious as a result of the assault.”
Under Hasan’s direction, Jayun Patel, a master’s student and graduate research assistant in the UAB Secure and Trustworthy Computing Lab (SECRETLab) has developed a smart bracelet to automatically detect physical assault and call for help.
Upon detection that the user is in danger, it is programmed to emit a loud beeping sound and red strobe lights begin to flash in an effort to scare the attacker off and to alert other people who may be nearby.
The Smart Jewelry Bracelet, which is currently a prototype, uses machine learning and a multitude of sensors to analyze a user’s movements in order to detect an assault as it is taking place. Upon detection that the user is in danger, it is programmed to emit a loud beeping sound and red strobe lights begin to flash in an effort to scare the attacker off and to alert other people who may be nearby. The device then connects to the user’s smartphone via Bluetooth and instantly sends emergency messages and coordinates of the user’s location to emergency personnel and a list of contacts predetermined by the user through a mobile app. The bracelet contains an Adafruit Circuit Playground, a small microcontroller equipped with a gyroscope, accelerometer, temperature and pressure sensors, GPS, and microphones.
“The sensors allow the bracelet to collect user activity and vital signs continuously,” Patel said. “It can also determine the orientation of the user, for example, whether they are standing or lying down. A machine learning algorithm detects and differentiates the user’s regular movement and unexpected and sudden movements that can be indicative of an assault.”
While the bracelet was primarily designed for detecting assault, the device can also be used by the elderly or those with disabilities to automatically detect sudden falls or other risky movements. Patel hopes to refine the design and expand the technology to other everyday items worn on the body, such as earrings and shoes.
The bracelet is an extension of Hasan’s research, which is focused on wearable cloud technology, that if produced commercially could help consumers carry a lot of computer capabilities and sensibilities in everyday things, such as clothes, accessories and other things that we carry with us on a regular basis. All of the wearable technology designed in Hasan’s lab is created with low-cost usability in mind so that it would be affordable for all consumers. The Smart Bracelet prototype cost less than $40 to create and can be made even cheaper if it is mass-produced commercially.
Patel’s work on the Smart Bracelet began when she was an undergraduate while participating in a summer research internship in May 2017. The research was supported by a National Science Foundation CAREER Award given to Hasan in 2014. Patel’s paper, “Smart Bracelets: Towards Automating Safety using Wearable Smart Jewelry,” received second place for Best Demo at the 2018 IEEE Consumer Communication and Networking Conference in January 2018.
The Smart Bracelet and other wearable cloud devices created in the UAB SECRETLab have been featured in the National Science Foundation’s online video magazine, Science Nation.
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