Aussie boffins tailor smart clothes

Oh no, Gromit! It's the wrong trousers!

Written by Robert Jaques

Researchers from the University of South Australia have developed techo-trousers embedded with tiny electronic sensors that can monitor heart or respiratory functions wirelessly.

The smart garments, which can potentially include all types of clothes, can download data to near-by computers when placed on electronic hangers.

Professor Bruce Thomas, director of the University of South Australia's Wearable Computer Laboratory, said: "For continuous monitoring, you can take off one garment and put on another smart garment so that, instead of having just one heart monitor, you can have a wardrobe of them."

Professor Thomas admitted that his researchers were not the first to think of this technology, but claimed to be the first to develop a smart garment management system that actually works.

"The wardrobe has a touch screen on the outside and conductive metal bands spanning the hanging rail inside, with wires connecting it to a computer in the base of the wardrobe," he explained.

"When we place electronic hangers, each with their own ID and metal connection, on the rail, it detects the hangers and smart garments incorporating the conductive material and integrated electronics.

"The computer then identifies that hanger 123 has coat 45 on it, for example, which has heart monitoring data that needs to be downloaded and the hanger recharged."

Garments with communication technology and a wireless connection enable users to access heart monitoring through a Bluetooth or Zigbee network, eliminating the need for expensive heart monitoring equipment to be placed in each garment.

Professor Thomas speculated that future smart garments could be used for a range of other monitoring services such as at home outpatient care and for people with dementia.

Such patients could have a full life for as long as possible with a minimum level of intervention, and could be monitored without having to learn how to use a new device.

"The garments enable us to monitor vital statistics and activity levels, such as when they get up, walk around, make breakfast and dinner, or sleep," said Professor Thomas.

"But more importantly, we can determine if they are missing meals, fall over or stop moving.

"The technology can distinguish between normal and abnormal events and alert family or emergency services or, for people who live in retirement villages, alert local medical staff."

Tags:

Further reading

Boffins build bionic baby

Child-robot with Biometric Body has 200 optical, auditory and tactile sensors   More...

Boffins build boredom buster

MIT staff create computer to help autistic users   More...

Boffins hail quantum computing breakthrough

Delft University of Technology carries out calculations with quantum bits   More...

US boffins promise organic semiconductors

New material could be used in flexible e-book screens   More...

Related articles

Trans-Pacific 1Gbps link boosts research

Dedicated video link better than MIT's coffee pot cam   More...

'Grasshopper' robot breaks jumping record

One giant leap for robot-kind   More...

Ofcom outlines future wireless vision

Wi-Fi healthcare and intelligent car brakes in the pipeline   More...

Aussies pump millions into power vests

Shirt generates power as you walk   More...

Do you agree?

Advertisement

Job of the week

Search thousands of IT jobs :

Search thousands of IT jobs:

Advanced search

Hiring now on ComputingCareers:

Related IT jobs

Search thousands of IT jobs :

Search thousands of IT jobs:

Advanced search

Advertisement

Watch

23 Jul 2008

2.99 MBSmall time security, official 'spying' requests and a spammer jail break More...

22 Jul 2008

3.22 MBSat-nav crashes, open source security and female gamers More...

21 Jul 2008

3.12 MBGlobal internet reach, online spending and the space race More...

Poll

EUROPEAN E-COMMERCE

EUROPEAN E-COMMERCE

Are you happy making an online purchase from another European country?

Previous poll results

Newsletter signup

Sign up for our range of FREE newsletters:

Existing User

Newsletter user login:

Enter email address to edit your newsletter preferences

Spotlight

Security

Major DNS flaw revealed

Experts sound alarms over early disclosure   More...

Nintendo DS

Dodgy Chinese Nintendo chargers recalled

Experience could shock some users   More...

Advertisement

Houses of Parliament

Official 'spying' requests top 500,000

Information includes web records and itemised phone bills   More...

Hacking

Small firms naïve about security

SMBs remain prone to attack, says study   More...

Advertisement