The D1NAMO dataset provides multi-modal wearable sensor data from 20 healthy subjects and 9 type-1 diabetes patients acquired in real-life conditions to aid diabetes management research.
Observational (n=29)
The open D1NAMO dataset provides multi-modal wearable sensor data from healthy subjects and type-1 diabetes patients to facilitate the development of non-invasive diabetes management algorithms.
The usage of wearable devices has gained popularity in the latest years, especially for health-care and well being. Recently there has been an increasing interest in using these devices to improve the management of chronic diseases such as diabetes. The quality of data acquired through wearable sensors is generally lower than what medical-grade devices provide, and existing datasets have mainly been acquired in highly controlled clinical conditions. In the context of the D1NAMO project — aiming to detect glycemic events through non-invasive ECG pattern analysis — we elaborated a dataset that can be used to help developing health-care systems based on wearable devices in non-clinical conditions. This paper describes this dataset, which was acquired on 20 healthy subjects and 9 patients with type-1 diabetes. The acquisition has been made in real-life conditions with the Zephyr BioHarness 3 wearable device. The dataset consists of ECG, breathing, and accelerometer signals, as well as glucose measurements and annotated food pictures. We open this dataset to the scientific community in order to allow the development and evaluation of diabetes management algorithms.
Dubosson et al. (Mon,) conducted a observational in Type 1 diabetes (n=29). Zephyr BioHarness 3 wearable device was evaluated. The D1NAMO dataset provides multi-modal wearable sensor data from 20 healthy subjects and 9 type-1 diabetes patients acquired in real-life conditions to aid diabetes management research.
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