Apple's rumored iWatch will reportedly use optoelectronics to monitor a wearer's heart rate and blood oxygen levels, reports China's Electrical Engineering Times via AppleInsider.
Apple is said to have chosen the light-based technology over electrocardiography, a more accurate method which measures electrical impulses, due to the former's ability to continuously monitor heart rate with no action from the user. Most ECG-based products require multiple contacts, meaning users must either attach multiple diodes to their body or touch the product with both hands to get a reading.
Industry analyst Sun Chang Xu says that blood glucose monitoring was also considered by Apple but due to the "inaccuracy" of using optoelectronics for non-invasive blood glucose testing, the company scrapped the feature.
Optoelectronics can be used to monitor blood oxygen levels via pulse oximetry. Visible red and infrared LEDs are used to detect how much oxygen is carried in the blood's hemoglobin. Oxygenated hemoglobin absorbs more infrared light, while deoxygenated hemoglobin absorbs more visible red light. Pulse oximeters often clip to the end of your finger.
To monitor your heart rate, visible light is passed through the skin and absorbed by your blood. More light is absorbed when your body pumps more blood and so the changes in reflected light can be tracked and used to calculate your heart rate.
Corroborating the report, Apple has recently hired former executives Marcelo Malini Lamego and Michael O'Reilly from Masimo Corporation, a company that specializes in the technology.
At this point a release date for the iWatch is unclear; however, if it works alongside an iOS 8 app called 'Healthbook' then it would like be unveiled alongside the iPhone 6 which is expected this fall.
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Read More [via AppleInsider]
Apple is said to have chosen the light-based technology over electrocardiography, a more accurate method which measures electrical impulses, due to the former's ability to continuously monitor heart rate with no action from the user. Most ECG-based products require multiple contacts, meaning users must either attach multiple diodes to their body or touch the product with both hands to get a reading.
Industry analyst Sun Chang Xu says that blood glucose monitoring was also considered by Apple but due to the "inaccuracy" of using optoelectronics for non-invasive blood glucose testing, the company scrapped the feature.
Optoelectronics can be used to monitor blood oxygen levels via pulse oximetry. Visible red and infrared LEDs are used to detect how much oxygen is carried in the blood's hemoglobin. Oxygenated hemoglobin absorbs more infrared light, while deoxygenated hemoglobin absorbs more visible red light. Pulse oximeters often clip to the end of your finger.
To monitor your heart rate, visible light is passed through the skin and absorbed by your blood. More light is absorbed when your body pumps more blood and so the changes in reflected light can be tracked and used to calculate your heart rate.
Corroborating the report, Apple has recently hired former executives Marcelo Malini Lamego and Michael O'Reilly from Masimo Corporation, a company that specializes in the technology.
At this point a release date for the iWatch is unclear; however, if it works alongside an iOS 8 app called 'Healthbook' then it would like be unveiled alongside the iPhone 6 which is expected this fall.
Please follow iClarified on Twitter, Facebook, or RSS for updates.
Read More [via AppleInsider]