Body area network
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A body area network (BAN), also referred to as a wireless body area network (WBAN), a body sensor network (BSN) or a medical body area network (MBAN), is a wireless network of wearable computing devices.[1][2][3][4][5] BAN devices may be embedded inside the body as implants or pills,[6] may be surface-mounted on the body in a fixed position, or may be accompanied devices which humans can carry in different positions, such as in clothes pockets, by hand, or in various bags.[7] Devices are becoming smaller, especially in body area networks. These networks include multiple small body sensor units (BSUs) and a single central unit (BCU).[8] Despite this trend, decimeter (tab and pad) sized smart devices still play an important role. They act as data hubs or gateways and provide a user interface for viewing and managing BAN applications on the spot. The development of WBAN technology started around 1995 around the idea of using wireless personal area network (WPAN) technologies to implement communications on, near, and around the human body. About six years later, the term "BAN" came to refer to systems where communication is entirely within, on, and in the immediate proximity of a human body.[9][10] A WBAN system can use WPAN wireless technologies as gateways to reach longer ranges. Through gateway devices, it is possible to connect the wearable devices on the human body to the internet. This way, medical professionals can access patient data online using the internet independent of the patient location.[11]
Concept
[edit]The rapid growth in physiological sensors, low-power integrated circuits, and wireless communication has enabled a new generation of wireless sensor networks, now used for purposes such as monitoring traffic, crops, infrastructure, and health. The body area network field is an interdisciplinary area which could allow inexpensive and continuous health monitoring with real-time updates of medical records through the Internet. A number of intelligent physiological sensors can be integrated into a wearable wireless body area network, which can be used for computer-assisted rehabilitation or early detection of medical conditions. This area relies on the feasibility of implanting very small biosensors inside the human body that are comfortable and that don't impair normal activities. The implanted sensors in the human body will collect various physiological changes in order to monitor the patient's health status no matter their location. The information will be transmitted wirelessly to an external processing unit. This device will instantly transmit all information in real time to the doctors throughout the world. If an emergency is detected, the physicians will immediately inform the patient through the computer system by sending appropriate messages or alarms. Currently, the level of information provided and energy resources capable of powering the sensors are limiting. While the technology is still in its primitive stage it is being widely researched and once adopted, is expected to be a breakthrough invention in healthcare, leading to concepts like telemedicine and MHealth becoming real.
Applications
[edit]Initial applications of BANs are expected to appear primarily in the healthcare domain, especially for continuous monitoring and logging vital parameters of patients with chronic diseases such as diabetes, asthma and heart attacks.
- A BAN in place on a patient can alert the hospital, even before they have a heart attack, through measuring changes in their vital signs.
- A BAN on a patient with diabetes could auto inject insulin through a pump, as soon as their blood-sugar levels increase.
- A BAN can be used, to learn the underlying health state transitions and dynamics of a disease[5]
Other applications of this technology include sports, military, or security. Extending the technology to new areas could also assist communication by seamless exchanges of information between individuals, or between individuals and machines.
Standards
[edit]The latest international standard for BANs is the IEEE 802.15.6 standard.[12]
Components
[edit]A typical BAN or BSN requires vital sign monitoring sensors, motion detectors (through accelerometers) to help identify the location of the monitored individual and some form of communication, to transmit vital sign and motion readings to medical practitioners or care givers. A typical body area network kit will consist of sensors, a Processor, a transceiver and a battery. Physiological sensors, such as ECG and SpO2 sensors, have been developed. Other sensors such as a blood pressure sensor, EEG sensor and a PDA for BSN interface are under development.[13]
Wireless communication in the U.S.
[edit]The FCC has approved the allocation of 40 MHz of spectrum bandwidth for medical BAN low-power, wide-area radio links at the 2360–2400 MHz band. This will allow off-loading MBAN communication from the already saturated standard Wi-Fi spectrum to a standard band.[14]
The 2360–2390 MHz frequency range is available on a secondary basis. The FCC will expand the existing Medical Device Radiocommunication (MedRadio) Service in Part 95 of its rules. MBAN devices using the band will operate under a 'license-by-rule' basis which eliminates the need to apply for individual transmitter licenses. Usage of the 2360–2390 MHz frequencies are restricted to indoor operation at health-care facilities and are subject to registration and site approval by coordinators to protect aeronautical telemetry primary usage. Operation in the 2390–2400 MHz band is not subject to registration or coordination and may be used in all areas including residential.[15]
Challenges
[edit]Problems with the use of this technology could include:
- Data quality: Data generated and collected through BANs can play a key role in the patient care process. It is essential that the quality of this data is of a high standard to ensure that the decisions made are based on the best information possible
- Data management: As BANs generate large volumes of data, the need to manage and maintain these datasets is of utmost importance.[16]
- Sensor validation: Pervasive sensing devices are subject to inherent communication and hardware constraints including unreliable wired/wireless network links, interference and limited power reserves. This may result in erroneous datasets being transmitted back to the end user. It is of the utmost importance especially within a healthcare domain that all sensor readings are validated. This helps to reduce false alarm generation and to identify possible weaknesses within the hardware and software design.
- Data consistency: Data residing on multiple mobile devices and wireless patient notes need to be collected and analysed in a seamless fashion. Within body area networks, vital patient datasets may be fragmented over a number of nodes and across a number of networked PCs or Laptops. If a medical practitioner's mobile device does not contain all known information then the quality of patient care may degrade.
- Security: Considerable effort would be required to make WBAN transmission secure and accurate. It would have to be made sure that the patient secure data is only derived from each patient's dedicated WBAN system and is not mixed up with other patient's data. Further, the data generated from WBAN should have secure and limited access. Although security is a high priority in most networks, little study has been done in this area for WBANs. As WBANs are resource-constrained in terms of power, memory, communication rate and computational capability, security solutions proposed for other networks may not be applicable to WBANs. Confidentiality, authentication, integrity, and freshness of data together with availability and secure management are the security requirements in WBAN. The IEEE 802.15.6 standard, which is latest standard for WBAN, tried to provide security in WBAN. However, it has several security problems.[17]
- Interoperability: WBAN systems would have to ensure seamless data transfer across standards such as Bluetooth, Zigbee etc. to promote information exchange, plug and play device interaction. Further, the systems would have to be scalable, ensure efficient migration across networks and offer uninterrupted connectivity.
- System devices: The sensors used in WBAN would have to be low on complexity, small in form factor, light in weight, power efficient, easy to use and reconfigurable. Further, the storage devices need to facilitate remote storage and viewing of patient data as well as access to external processing and analysis tools via the Internet.
- Energy vs. accuracy: Sensors' activation policy should be determined to optimizing the trade-off between the BAN's power consumption versus the probability of patient's health state mis-classification. High power consumption often results in more accurate observations on the patient's health state and vice versa.[18]
- Privacy: People might consider the WBAN technology as a potential threat to freedom if the applications go beyond "secure" medical usage. Social acceptance would be key to this technology finding a wider application.
- Interference: The wireless link used for body sensors should reduce the interference and increase the coexistence of sensor node devices with other network devices available in the environment. This is especially important for large scale implementation of WBAN systems.[9][19]
- Cost: Today's consumers expect low cost health monitoring solutions which provide high functionality. WBAN implementations will need to be cost optimized to be appealing alternatives to health conscious consumers.
- Constant monitoring: Users may require different levels of monitoring, for example those at risk of cardiac ischemia may want their WBANs to function constantly, while others at risk of falls may only need WBANs to monitor them while they are walking or moving. The level of monitoring influences the amount of energy required and the life cycle of the BAN before the energy source is depleted.[5][18]
- Constrained deployment: The WBAN needs to be wearable, lightweight and non intrusive. It should not alter or encumber the user's daily activities. The technology should ultimately be transparent to the user i.e., it should perform its monitoring tasks without the user realising it.
- Consistent performance: The performance of the WBAN should be consistent. Sensor measurements should be accurate and calibrated, even when the WBAN is switched off and switched on again.[20] The wireless links should be robust and work under various user environments.
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "IEEE 802.15 WPAN Task Group 6 Body Area Networks". Archived from the original on 2018-03-25. Retrieved 2011-02-03.
- ^ Ullah, S.; Higgins, H.; Braem, B.; Latre, B.; Blondia, C.; Moerman, I.; Saleem, S.; Rahman, Z.; Kwak, K. S. (2012). "A Comprehensive Survey of Wireless Body Area Networks: On PHY, MAC, and Network Layers Solutions". Journal of Medical Systems. 36 (3): 1065–1094. doi:10.1007/s10916-010-9571-3. hdl:1854/LU-3234782. PMID 20721685. S2CID 7988320. Archived from the original on 2020-02-15. Retrieved 2019-12-13.
- ^ Chen, Min; Gonzalez, Sergio; Vasilakos, Athanasios; Cao, Huasong; Leung, Victor (2010). "Body Area Networks: A Survey" (PDF). Mobile Networks and Applications. 16 (2): 1–23. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.329.7097. doi:10.1007/s11036-010-0260-8. ISSN 1383-469X. S2CID 16514036. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2017-08-10. Retrieved 2010-09-05.
- ^ Movassaghi, Samaneh; Abolhasan, Mehran; Lipman, Justin; Smith, David; Jamalipour, Abbas (2014). "Wireless Body Area Networks: A Survey". IEEE Communications Surveys and Tutorials. 16 (3): 1658–1686. doi:10.1109/SURV.2013.121313.00064. S2CID 3835757.
- ^ a b c Geller, T., David, Y. B., Khmelnitsky, E., Ben-Gal, I., Ward, A., Miller, D., & Bambos, N. (2019, May). "Learning Health State Transition Probabilities via Wireless Body Area Networks" (PDF). In ICC 2019-2019 IEEE International Conference on Communications (ICC), pp. 1-6. IEEE. 2019. Archived from the original (PDF) on February 4, 2020.
{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - ^ Lamanna, Leonardo; Cataldi, Pietro; Friuli, Marco; Demitri, Christian; Caironi, Mario (January 2023). "Monitoring of Drug Release via Intra Body Communication with an Edible Pill". Advanced Materials Technologies. 8 (1) 2200731. doi:10.1002/admt.202200731. ISSN 2365-709X. S2CID 253174336.
- ^ Poslad, Stefan (2009). Ubiquitous Computing Smart Devices, Smart Environments and Smart Interaction. Wiley. ISBN 978-0-470-03560-3. Archived from the original on 2012-02-15. Retrieved 2014-06-23.
- ^ Schmidt R, Norgall T, Mörsdorf J, Bernhard J, von der Grün T (2002). "Body Area Network BAN—a key infrastructure element for patient-centered medical applications". Biomed Tech. 47 (1): 365–8. doi:10.1515/bmte.2002.47.s1a.365. PMID 12451866. S2CID 37439434.
- ^ a b M. R. Yuce (2010). "Implementation of wireless body area networks for healthcare systems". Sensors and Actuators A: Physical. 162 (1): 116–129. Bibcode:2010SeAcA.162..116Y. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.476.3929. doi:10.1016/j.sna.2010.06.004.
- ^ Vierhout, P. a. M.; Konstantas, D.; Bults, Richard G. A.; Jones, Valerie M. (2001-09-18). "Body Area Networks for Healthcare" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2013-06-15. Retrieved 2011-02-03.
- ^ Yuce, Mehmet R.; Khan, Jamil (2011-12-06). Wireless Body Area Networks. Singapore: CRC Press. ISBN 978-981-4241-57-1.
- ^ "IEEE P802.15.6-2012 Standard for Wireless Body Area Networks". Archived from the original on 2018-01-19. Retrieved 2015-03-12.
- ^ "Body Sensor Networks". Archived from the original on 2009-12-16. Retrieved 2010-08-12.
- ^ Mearian, Lucas (2012-06-04). "'Body Area Networks' should free hospital bandwidth, untether patients – Computerworld". Computerworld. Archived from the original on 2013-06-19. Retrieved 2012-06-06.
- ^ "FCC Dedicates Spectrum Enabling Medical Body Area Networks | FCC.gov". Archived from the original on 2012-05-30. Retrieved 2012-06-06.
- ^ Healthcare Sensor Networks Challenges Toward Practical Implementation. CRC Press. 19 April 2016. ISBN 978-1-000-75570-1. Archived from the original on 17 January 2023. Retrieved 11 June 2021.
- ^ Toorani, Mohsen (2015). "On Vulnerabilities of the Security Association in the IEEE 802.15.6 Standard". Financial Cryptography and Data Security. Lecture Notes in Computer Science. Vol. 8976. pp. 245–260. arXiv:1501.02601. doi:10.1007/978-3-662-48051-9_18. ISBN 978-3-662-48050-2.
- ^ a b Miller, Daniel; Zhou, Zhengyuan; Bambos, Nicholas; Ben-Gal, Irad (2018). "Sensing-Constrained Power Control in Digital Health". 2018 Annual American Control Conference (ACC). pp. 4213–4220. doi:10.23919/ACC.2018.8431675. ISBN 978-1-5386-5428-6. S2CID 52020398.
- ^ Garcia, P. (December 2011). "A Methodology for the Deployment of Sensor Networks". IEEE Transactions on Knowledge and Data Engineering. 11 (4).
- ^ O'Donovan, Tony; O'Donoghue, John; Sreenan, Cormac; Sammon, David; O'Reilly, Philip; O'Connor, Kieran A. (2009). "A Context Aware Wireless Body Area Network (BAN)" (PDF). Proceedings of the 3d International ICST Conference on Pervasive Computing Technologies for Healthcare. doi:10.4108/ICST.PERVASIVEHEALTH2009.5987. S2CID 14131365. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2016-10-09. Retrieved 2016-06-05.
Further reading
[edit]- Ullah, Sana; Higgins, Henry; Braem, Bart; Latre, Benoit; Blondia, Chris; Moerman, Ingrid; Saleem, Shahnaz; Rahman, Ziaur & Kwak, Kyung (2010). "A Comprehensive Survey of Wireless Body Area Networks". Journal of Medical Systems. 36 (3): 1–30. doi:10.1007/s10916-010-9571-3. hdl:1854/LU-3234782. ISSN 0148-5598. PMID 20721685. S2CID 7988320.
External links
[edit]Body area network
View on GrokipediaDefinition and Fundamentals
Concept
A body area network (BAN), also known as a wireless body area network (WBAN), is a short-range wireless communication system that enables the interconnection of low-power sensors and devices positioned on, in, or around the human body to facilitate data exchange and monitoring.[3] These networks typically operate within a range of 2-3 meters, supporting communication between nodes such as wearable or implantable sensors and a central coordinator.[2] The core principles of BANs revolve around on-body, in-body, and around-body communications, emphasizing ultra-low power consumption—often at milliwatt levels (e.g., less than 1 mW peak power)—to ensure prolonged battery life for sensors monitoring physiological signals like electrocardiogram (ECG), electroencephalogram (EEG), or body temperature.[1] Real-time data transmission is prioritized, with key performance metrics including end-to-end latency under 10 ms for critical medical applications and data rates ranging from 10 kbps to 10 Mbps to handle varying sensor outputs efficiently.[5][6] Unlike broader personal area networks (PANs), which connect general devices over ranges up to 10 meters without body-specific constraints, BANs are inherently body-centric, imposing stringent requirements on device size, power efficiency, and biocompatibility to integrate seamlessly with human physiology.[7] This focus evolved from wearable computing initiatives in the 1990s, which initially explored wireless personal area network technologies for on-body connectivity.[8]Historical Development
The concept of body area networks (BANs) traces its roots to the 1990s, emerging from advancements in wearable computing research at institutions like MIT. In 1995, Thomas Guthrie Zimmerman, a MIT Media Laboratory student, proposed the idea of a Personal Area Network (PAN) using intra-body electrostatic communication, laying foundational groundwork for wireless body area networks (WBANs) by envisioning low-power, body-centric data transmission for health monitoring.[9] This built on broader wearable computing efforts, such as MIT's Wearable Computing Group projects in the mid-1990s, which developed prototypes integrating sensors for physiological data collection, including early biosensor designs for real-time health tracking. During the 2000s, BAN evolution accelerated with the adoption of short-range wireless technologies tailored for body-centric applications. Bluetooth, standardized in 1999 and widely implemented in the early 2000s, enabled low-power personal networks for wearable devices, while ZigBee, based on the 2003 IEEE 802.15.4 standard, supported mesh topologies for multi-sensor health monitoring systems.[10] These protocols addressed key challenges in BANs, such as energy efficiency and interference in on-body communications, paving the way for practical prototypes in telemedicine. In November 2007, the IEEE 802.15 working group formed Task Group 6 (TG6) specifically for WBAN standardization, focusing on ultra-low power consumption and reliable short-range operations.[11] The IEEE 802.15.6 standard was officially published in February 2012, defining MAC and PHY layers for BANs with support for implantable and wearable nodes, marking a pivotal milestone in global interoperability.[3] Influential developments in the early 2010s included the rise of implantable sensors integrated into BAN architectures, enabling invasive monitoring for chronic conditions like cardiac arrhythmias. Workshops and standards efforts, such as the 2010 International Workshop on Wearable and Implantable Body Sensor Networks, highlighted secure data transmission for these devices, influencing designs for long-term implantation.[12] Post-2020, BANs integrated with 5G and emerging 6G networks to enhance connectivity, supporting higher data rates and lower latency for real-time applications; for instance, 6G visions incorporate BANs for digital twin simulations of human physiology.[13] In the 2020s, AI-driven BANs gained prominence for predictive analytics, with techniques like machine learning optimizing resource allocation in dynamic environments.[14] By 2025, publications explored large language model (LLM)-adaptive WBANs for 6G-ready systems, using AI to dynamically adjust routing and security in response to physiological changes.[15] Additionally, the European Telecommunications Standards Institute (ETSI) advanced smart BAN standards in 2023, with specifications like TS 103 806 enabling hub-to-hub communications for enhanced interoperability.[16]| Year | Milestone |
|---|---|
| 1995 | Thomas Zimmerman proposes Personal Area Network concept at MIT, foundational for WBANs.[9] |
| 2003 | IEEE 802.15.4 standard published, basis for ZigBee in body-centric sensor networks.[10] |
| 2007 | IEEE 802.15 Task Group 6 formed for WBAN standardization.[11] |
| 2012 | IEEE 802.15.6 standard released for low-power BAN communications.[3] |
| 2023 | ETSI publishes TS 103 806 for smart BAN hub-to-hub capabilities.[16] |