Using smart phone mobility traces for the diagnosis of depressive and manic episodes in bipolar patients.
Agnes GrünerblVenet OsmaniGernot BahleJosé C. Carrasco-JiménezStefan OehlerOscar MayoraChristian HaringPaul LukowiczPublished in: AH (2014)
Keyphrases
- smart phones
- mobile phone
- mobile devices
- medical doctors
- clinically relevant
- cardiovascular disease
- diagnostic tests
- mobile users
- early diagnosis
- critical care
- heart disease
- differential diagnosis
- clinical diagnosis
- neurodegenerative diseases
- spect images
- medical practitioners
- mobile applications
- primary care
- wifi
- mobile networks
- therapy planning
- medical diagnosis
- positive and negative
- diagnostic tool
- mobile platform
- mobile agents
- medical knowledge
- medical practice
- processing power
- handheld devices
- health care
- behavior analysis
- normal subjects
- model based diagnosis
- obstructive sleep apnea
- liver disease
- acute myeloid
- high density
- clinical data
- medical data
- fault diagnosis
- mobile platforms
- risk factors
- clinical decision support systems
- patient data
- medical staff
- mobile computing
- user behavior
- sleep apnea
- context aware
- data management