Assessment of Infrared Thermography of Thyroid Gland for Development of a New Non-invasive Sleep Detection System

Background and Objective: One of the causes of the human death is the road crashes due to the driver drowsiness or falling asleep. Thermography is one of new techniques for non-invasive automatic detection of driver drowsiness, which could help to prevent sleep-related road accidents. In this resea...

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Main Authors: Farshad Bahramian, Afsaneh Mojra
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Tehran University of Medical Sciences 2019-12-01
Series:Journal of Sleep Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:https://jss.tums.ac.ir/index.php/jss/article/view/135
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spelling doaj-4cd8b78d4e1d4347a186b0884b0617542020-12-02T05:38:52ZengTehran University of Medical SciencesJournal of Sleep Sciences2476-29382476-29462019-12-0141-2Assessment of Infrared Thermography of Thyroid Gland for Development of a New Non-invasive Sleep Detection SystemFarshad Bahramian0Afsaneh Mojra1Department of Mechanical Engineering, School of Mechanical Engineering, K. N. Toosi University of Technology, Tehran, IranDepartment of Mechanical Engineering, School of Mechanical Engineering, K. N. Toosi University of Technology, Tehran, Iran Background and Objective: One of the causes of the human death is the road crashes due to the driver drowsiness or falling asleep. Thermography is one of new techniques for non-invasive automatic detection of driver drowsiness, which could help to prevent sleep-related road accidents. In this research, we aimed to record the temperature of the thyroid gland when a person is awake, drowsy, or starts to fall asleep. Materials and Methods: For capturing the neck’s thermogram, a human thermal video recording was designed. The imaging procedure consisted of the attended cases’ preparation, capturing static thermal video of the neck, and analyz-ing the resultant thermal videos with a particular image-processing algorithm for extracting the temperature data. The image-processing algorithm consisted of image segmentation, noise reduction, and specification of the region of interest for recording the thyroid temperature. Results: In the wakefulness, a region of the skin, which is in the front of thyroid gland, had an average temperature of 34.5 ± 0.3 C. A change from being awake to being drowsy and falling asleep reduced the average temperature of the neck area to 33.5 ± 0.2 C and 32.5 ± 0.1 C, respectively. Conclusion: A change from being awake to being drowsy and falling asleep reduces the temperature of the thyroid gland and the neck skin which is located in front of the thyroid gland. By knowing such temperature reduction, a non-invasive system for detection of the person drowsiness or falling asleep can be developed by means of the infrared thermography (IRT). https://jss.tums.ac.ir/index.php/jss/article/view/135Thermography; Thyroid gland; Sleep
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Farshad Bahramian
Afsaneh Mojra
spellingShingle Farshad Bahramian
Afsaneh Mojra
Assessment of Infrared Thermography of Thyroid Gland for Development of a New Non-invasive Sleep Detection System
Journal of Sleep Sciences
Thermography; Thyroid gland; Sleep
author_facet Farshad Bahramian
Afsaneh Mojra
author_sort Farshad Bahramian
title Assessment of Infrared Thermography of Thyroid Gland for Development of a New Non-invasive Sleep Detection System
title_short Assessment of Infrared Thermography of Thyroid Gland for Development of a New Non-invasive Sleep Detection System
title_full Assessment of Infrared Thermography of Thyroid Gland for Development of a New Non-invasive Sleep Detection System
title_fullStr Assessment of Infrared Thermography of Thyroid Gland for Development of a New Non-invasive Sleep Detection System
title_full_unstemmed Assessment of Infrared Thermography of Thyroid Gland for Development of a New Non-invasive Sleep Detection System
title_sort assessment of infrared thermography of thyroid gland for development of a new non-invasive sleep detection system
publisher Tehran University of Medical Sciences
series Journal of Sleep Sciences
issn 2476-2938
2476-2946
publishDate 2019-12-01
description Background and Objective: One of the causes of the human death is the road crashes due to the driver drowsiness or falling asleep. Thermography is one of new techniques for non-invasive automatic detection of driver drowsiness, which could help to prevent sleep-related road accidents. In this research, we aimed to record the temperature of the thyroid gland when a person is awake, drowsy, or starts to fall asleep. Materials and Methods: For capturing the neck’s thermogram, a human thermal video recording was designed. The imaging procedure consisted of the attended cases’ preparation, capturing static thermal video of the neck, and analyz-ing the resultant thermal videos with a particular image-processing algorithm for extracting the temperature data. The image-processing algorithm consisted of image segmentation, noise reduction, and specification of the region of interest for recording the thyroid temperature. Results: In the wakefulness, a region of the skin, which is in the front of thyroid gland, had an average temperature of 34.5 ± 0.3 C. A change from being awake to being drowsy and falling asleep reduced the average temperature of the neck area to 33.5 ± 0.2 C and 32.5 ± 0.1 C, respectively. Conclusion: A change from being awake to being drowsy and falling asleep reduces the temperature of the thyroid gland and the neck skin which is located in front of the thyroid gland. By knowing such temperature reduction, a non-invasive system for detection of the person drowsiness or falling asleep can be developed by means of the infrared thermography (IRT).
topic Thermography; Thyroid gland; Sleep
url https://jss.tums.ac.ir/index.php/jss/article/view/135
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