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Mission Statement
Work with standard developing organizations and relevant industry consortia in order to study connectivity, interoperability, coexistence and scalability for body area networks. Facilitate the development of an implant propagation model and protocols for medical applications.
Contact
Wen-Bin Yang Emerging & Mobile Network Technologies wen-bin.yang@nist.gov |
Implant Communications in Body Area Networks
What is a BAN?A Body Area Network (BAN) is a conceptual term for a network technology targeted for use in or around the human body. Two competing applications driving this development are medical applications (e.g. implants) and entertainment.What are the issues with BANs?Today there are no standards for short range, wireless communication to/from an implant (or a sensor) located inside (or on the surface) of a human body. Developing such communication protocols is a difficult task since there are currently no models/data available to characterize the propagation from implanted devices. As physical experiments are nearly impossible, intricate simulation models are the only option to study this problem. Also, RF coexistence and interoperability of such body area sensors with other wireless technologies need to be thoroughly evaluated to determine their effectiveness for practical applications. What are we doing to address these issues?NIST staff is facilitating the development of standards for Body Area Networks and contributing to the efforts of the IEEE 802.15.6. Our efforts include:
Technical developments
Past related networking and medical devicesIn the past we examined the various (then current) wireless networking technologies and evlauted their ability to satisfy the medical devices' applications' requirements. (See past project) |