Measurement, Prediction, and Control of Individual Heart Rate Responses to Exercise—Basics and Options for Wearable Devices

The use of wearable devices or “wearables” in the physical activity domain has been increasing in the last years. These devices are used as training tools providing the user with detailed information about individual physiological responses and feedback to the physical training process. Advantages i...

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Main Authors: Melanie Ludwig, Katrin Hoffmann, Stefan Endler, Alexander Asteroth, Josef Wiemeyer
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2018-06-01
Series:Frontiers in Physiology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fphys.2018.00778/full
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spelling doaj-9f22d5a143a8464d8cc229ab668302262020-11-24T20:58:08ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Physiology1664-042X2018-06-01910.3389/fphys.2018.00778333901Measurement, Prediction, and Control of Individual Heart Rate Responses to Exercise—Basics and Options for Wearable DevicesMelanie Ludwig0Katrin Hoffmann1Stefan Endler2Alexander Asteroth3Josef Wiemeyer4Department of Computer Sciences, Institute of Technology, Resource and Energy-Efficient Engineering, Bonn-Rhein-Sieg University of Applied Sciences, St. Augustin, GermanyDepartment of Human Sciences, Institute of Sport Science, Technical University of Darmstadt, Darmstadt, GermanyDepartment of Computer Science in Sports, Institute of Computer Science, Johannes Gutenberg University of Mainz, Mainz, GermanyDepartment of Computer Sciences, Institute of Technology, Resource and Energy-Efficient Engineering, Bonn-Rhein-Sieg University of Applied Sciences, St. Augustin, GermanyDepartment of Human Sciences, Institute of Sport Science, Technical University of Darmstadt, Darmstadt, GermanyThe use of wearable devices or “wearables” in the physical activity domain has been increasing in the last years. These devices are used as training tools providing the user with detailed information about individual physiological responses and feedback to the physical training process. Advantages in sensor technology, miniaturization, energy consumption and processing power increased the usability of these wearables. Furthermore, available sensor technologies must be reliable, valid, and usable. Considering the variety of the existing sensors not all of them are suitable to be integrated in wearables. The application and development of wearables has to consider the characteristics of the physical training process to improve the effectiveness and efficiency as training tools. During physical training, it is essential to elicit individual optimal strain to evoke the desired adjustments to training. One important goal is to neither overstrain nor under challenge the user. Many wearables use heart rate as indicator for this individual strain. However, due to a variety of internal and external influencing factors, heart rate kinetics are highly variable making it difficult to control the stress eliciting individually optimal strain. For optimal training control it is essential to model and predict individual responses and adapt the external stress if necessary. Basis for this modeling is the valid and reliable recording of these individual responses. Depending on the heart rate kinetics and the obtained physiological data, different models and techniques are available that can be used for strain or training control. Aim of this review is to give an overview of measurement, prediction, and control of individual heart rate responses. Therefore, available sensor technologies measuring the individual heart rate responses are analyzed and approaches to model and predict these individual responses discussed. Additionally, the feasibility for wearables is analyzed.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fphys.2018.00778/fullwearable sensorsheart rate modelingheart rate controlheart rate predictionphenomenological approachestraining monitoring
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Melanie Ludwig
Katrin Hoffmann
Stefan Endler
Alexander Asteroth
Josef Wiemeyer
spellingShingle Melanie Ludwig
Katrin Hoffmann
Stefan Endler
Alexander Asteroth
Josef Wiemeyer
Measurement, Prediction, and Control of Individual Heart Rate Responses to Exercise—Basics and Options for Wearable Devices
Frontiers in Physiology
wearable sensors
heart rate modeling
heart rate control
heart rate prediction
phenomenological approaches
training monitoring
author_facet Melanie Ludwig
Katrin Hoffmann
Stefan Endler
Alexander Asteroth
Josef Wiemeyer
author_sort Melanie Ludwig
title Measurement, Prediction, and Control of Individual Heart Rate Responses to Exercise—Basics and Options for Wearable Devices
title_short Measurement, Prediction, and Control of Individual Heart Rate Responses to Exercise—Basics and Options for Wearable Devices
title_full Measurement, Prediction, and Control of Individual Heart Rate Responses to Exercise—Basics and Options for Wearable Devices
title_fullStr Measurement, Prediction, and Control of Individual Heart Rate Responses to Exercise—Basics and Options for Wearable Devices
title_full_unstemmed Measurement, Prediction, and Control of Individual Heart Rate Responses to Exercise—Basics and Options for Wearable Devices
title_sort measurement, prediction, and control of individual heart rate responses to exercise—basics and options for wearable devices
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Physiology
issn 1664-042X
publishDate 2018-06-01
description The use of wearable devices or “wearables” in the physical activity domain has been increasing in the last years. These devices are used as training tools providing the user with detailed information about individual physiological responses and feedback to the physical training process. Advantages in sensor technology, miniaturization, energy consumption and processing power increased the usability of these wearables. Furthermore, available sensor technologies must be reliable, valid, and usable. Considering the variety of the existing sensors not all of them are suitable to be integrated in wearables. The application and development of wearables has to consider the characteristics of the physical training process to improve the effectiveness and efficiency as training tools. During physical training, it is essential to elicit individual optimal strain to evoke the desired adjustments to training. One important goal is to neither overstrain nor under challenge the user. Many wearables use heart rate as indicator for this individual strain. However, due to a variety of internal and external influencing factors, heart rate kinetics are highly variable making it difficult to control the stress eliciting individually optimal strain. For optimal training control it is essential to model and predict individual responses and adapt the external stress if necessary. Basis for this modeling is the valid and reliable recording of these individual responses. Depending on the heart rate kinetics and the obtained physiological data, different models and techniques are available that can be used for strain or training control. Aim of this review is to give an overview of measurement, prediction, and control of individual heart rate responses. Therefore, available sensor technologies measuring the individual heart rate responses are analyzed and approaches to model and predict these individual responses discussed. Additionally, the feasibility for wearables is analyzed.
topic wearable sensors
heart rate modeling
heart rate control
heart rate prediction
phenomenological approaches
training monitoring
url https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fphys.2018.00778/full
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