Towards a wearable sensor for spectrally-resolved personal light monitoring
Given the large impact that the spectrum and intensity of light can have on people's health and well-being, it is of fundamental importance to understand the properties of light received under normal living conditions. Historically, as research into the biological responses of light has traditionally focused on laboratory studies with controlled lighting conditions, little is known about people's light exposure outside of experimental environments. Spectrace is the first wearable compressive spectrometer designed for continuous spectral light tracking in everyday environments. This paper presents the sensor and its evaluation based on wearability considerations and three performance criteria: 1) its accuracy (in terms of spectral sensing capability), 2) its reliability (notably as far as directional response is concerned), and 3) its adaptability to the large dynamics of ambient conditions. Results show the potential use of the newly developed sensor for chronobiological studies and beyond.
Webler et al CISBAT 2021 - Spectrace.pdf
Preprint
Submitted version (Preprint)
openaccess
Copyright
4.25 MB
Adobe PDF
ad87f3dd3b9c479b984f15f948c79911
Webler_2021_J._Phys.__Conf._Ser._2042_012120 (1).pdf
Publisher's Version
Published version
openaccess
CC BY
1.03 MB
Adobe PDF
b96f7ada8b29a9edf96851438e890fd7