Towards Measuring Stress with Smartphones and Wearable Devices During Workday and Sleep

被引:204
作者
Muaremi A. [1 ]
Arnrich B. [1 ]
Tröster G. [1 ]
机构
[1] Wearable Computing Lab, ETH Zurich, 8092 Zurich
关键词
Heart rate variability; Sleep; Smartphone; Stress; Wearable device;
D O I
10.1007/s12668-013-0089-2
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Work should be a source of health, pride, and happiness, in the sense of enhancing motivation and strengthening personal development. Healthy and motivated employees perform better and remain loyal to the company for a longer time. But, when the person constantly experiences high workload over a longer period of time and is not able to recover, then work may lead to prolonged negative effects and might cause serious illnesses like chronic stress disease. In this work, we present a solution for assessing the stress experience of people, using features derived from smartphones and wearable chest belts. In particular, we use information from audio, physical activity, and communication data collected during workday and heart rate variability data collected at night during sleep to build multinomial logistic regression models. We evaluate our system in a real work environment and in daily-routine scenarios of 35 employees over a period of 4 months and apply the leave-one-day-out cross-validation method for each user individually to estimate the prediction accuracy. Using only smartphone features, we get an accuracy of 55 %, and using only heart rate variability features, we get an accuracy of 59 %. The combination of all features leads to a rate of 61 % for a three-stress level (low, moderate, and high perceived stress) classification problem. © 2013 The Author(s).
引用
收藏
页码:172 / 183
页数:11
相关论文
共 41 条
[21]  
Lovibond S.H., Lovibond P.F., Manual for the depression anxiety & stress scales, Psychology Foundation, (1995)
[22]  
Lu H., Frauendorfer D., Rabbi M., Mast M.S., Chittaranjan G.T., Campbell A.T., Perez D.G., Choudhury T., StressSense: detecting stress in unconstrained acoustic environments using smartphones, Proceedings ACM ubiquitous computing (UbiComp), (2012)
[23]  
Mariani S., Migliorini M., Tacchino G., Gentili C., Bertschy G., Werner S., Clinical state assessment in bipolar patients by means of HRV features obtained with a sensorized T-shirt, Proceedings IEEE engineering in medicine and biology society (EMBC), (2012)
[24]  
McCullagh P., Nelder J.A., Generalized Linear Models, (1989)
[25]  
McElroy J.C., Hendrickson A.R., Townsend A.M., DeMarie S.M., Dispositional factors in internet use: personality versus cognitive style, MIS Quarterly, 31, 4, pp. 809-820, (2007)
[26]  
Melillo P., Bracale M., Pecchia L., Nonlinear heart rate variability features for real-life stress detection. Case study: students under stress due to university examination, Biomedical Engineering Online, 10, 1, (2011)
[27]  
Migliorini M., Time-frequency analysis of the ballistocardiogram for sleep staging, (2010)
[28]  
Migliorini M., Mendez M.O., Bianchi A.M., Study of heart rate variability in bipolar disorder: linear and non-linear parameters during sleep, Frontiers in Neuroengineering, 4, (2011)
[29]  
O'Dougherty M., Hearst M.O., Syed M., Kurzer M.S., Schmitz K.H., Life events, perceived stress and depressive symptoms in a physical activity intervention with young adult women, Mental Health and Physical Activity, 5, 2, pp. 148-154, (2012)
[30]  
Poh M.-Z., Swenson N.C., Picard R.W., A wearable sensor for unobtrusive, long-term assessment of electrodermal activity, Proceedings IEEE engineering in medicine and biology society (EMBC), (2010)