Communities & Collections
Researchers & Labs
Titles
DGIST
LIBRARY
DGIST R&D
Detail View
Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science
Information and Communication Engineering Research Center
1. Journal Articles
A 457 nW Near-Threshold Cognitive Multi-Functional ECG Processor for Long-Term Cardiac Monitoring
Liu, Xin
;
Zhou, Jun
;
Yang, Yongkui
;
Wang, Bo
;
Lan, Jingjing
;
Wang, Chao
;
Luo, Jianwen
;
Goh, Wang Ling
;
Kim, Tony Tae-Hyoung
;
Je, Minkyu
Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science
Information and Communication Engineering Research Center
1. Journal Articles
Citations
WEB OF SCIENCE
Citations
SCOPUS
Metadata Downloads
XML
Excel
Title
A 457 nW Near-Threshold Cognitive Multi-Functional ECG Processor for Long-Term Cardiac Monitoring
Issued Date
2014-11
Citation
Liu, Xin. (2014-11). A 457 nW Near-Threshold Cognitive Multi-Functional ECG Processor for Long-Term Cardiac Monitoring. IEEE Journal of Solid-State Circuits, 49(11), 2422–2434. doi: 10.1109/JSSC.2014.2338870
Type
Article
Author Keywords
Cognitive
;
ECG
;
multi-functional
;
nearthreshold
;
ultra low power
Keywords
WAVELET TRANSFORM
ISSN
0018-9200
Abstract
A low-power multi-functional electrocardiogram (ECG) signal processor is presented in this paper. To enable long-term monitoring, several architecture-level power saving techniques are proposed, including global cognitive clocking, pseudo-downsampling wavelet transform, adaptive storing, and denoising-based run-length compression. An ultra-low-voltage ADC is designed for low-power signal digitization with adaptive clocking. Through these architecture-level techniques, the total power consumption can be significantly reduced by 63% as compared to the conventional design. Several circuit-level design techniques are also developed, including ultra-low-voltage operation and near-threshold level shifting, to further reduce the power consumption by 33%. In addition, a low-complexity cardiac analysis scheme is proposed to realize comprehensive on-chip cardiac analysis. Implemented in 0.18 μm CMOS process, the proposed cognitive ECG processor consumes only 457 nW at 0.5 V for real-time ECG recording and diagnosis. © IEEE.
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11750/2639
DOI
10.1109/JSSC.2014.2338870
Publisher
Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc.
Show Full Item Record
File Downloads
There are no files associated with this item.
공유
공유하기
Total Views & Downloads