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Google develops phone camera system to track heart rate

Created at 5 Jun · 9:09 AM2 sources↑ Market-relevant2 events
IN SHORT

Google has developed a system using a smartphone's front camera and AI to estimate heart rate, achieving accuracy within 5 bpm of a Fitbit Charge 6 in tests. This research aims to make health tracking more accessible.

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Key Numbers

5 bpmaccuracy for resting heart rate estimates vs Fitbit Charge 6

Who's Involved

Google
developed the smartphone-based heart rate tracking system
Fitbit Charge 6
device used for accuracy comparison in testing

↳ Why This Matters

This technology could significantly increase the accessibility of heart health monitoring by leveraging the widespread availability of smartphones, potentially enabling early detection of cardiovascular issues for a larger population.

Key facts

  • Google developed a system to estimate heart rate using a smartphone's front-facing camera and AI.
  • The system can also estimate resting heart rate.
  • Testing showed accuracy within five beats per minute of a Fitbit Charge 6 for resting heart rate.
  • The technology is currently a research project.

Google has developed a new system that can estimate a person's heart rate and resting heart rate using only a smartphone's front-facing camera and on-device artificial intelligence. This research aims to bring health tracking capabilities, similar to those found in smartwatches and fitness bands, to a wider audience. In testing, the system reportedly achieved accuracy for resting heart rate estimates within five beats per minute of a Fitbit Charge 6. While still in the research phase, the technology could make heart health monitoring accessible to billions of smartphone users globally without the need for dedicated wearable devices. Google thinks your next heart-rate monitor might already be sitting in your pocket. In a newly published research, the company has detailed a system that can estimate a person's heart rate and resting heart rate using only a smartphone's front-facing camera. The technology could eventually bring wearable-like health tracking to people who don't own a smartwatch or fitness band. For years, tracking heart rate has largely been the job of devices strapped to your wrist. Products like Fitbit trackers and smartwatches have made it easy to monitor your cardiovascular health throughout the day. The catch is that not everyone owns one, and many people never will. Smartphones, on the other hand, are nearly everywhere. That's the opportunity Google is chasing.

Frequently asked questions

It uses a smartphone's front-facing camera and on-device AI to analyze subtle changes in skin color caused by blood flow.

In testing, it reportedly achieved accuracy within five beats per minute of a Fitbit Charge 6 for resting heart rate estimates.

The research suggests it could work with any smartphone equipped with a front-facing camera and sufficient processing power for on-device AI.

Google has described it as a research project, so a public release date has not been announced.

What Happens Next

01Further development and testing of the heart rate tracking system.

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Cadence

How It Developed

5 Jun · 3:40 PM
This article introduces the Fitbit Air, a screenless wearable focused on health tracking with an AI coach, distinct from Google's camera-based heart rate research.
Ars Technica via PiQSuite
5 Jun · 8:58 AM
Google developed a smartphone system using its camera and AI to estimate heart rate, potentially offering wearable-like accuracy to billions.
Android Authority via PiQSuite

Sources

T1
Google wants your phone to track your heart rate by simply looking at youm.piqsuite.com
T1
The Fitbit Air is a good wearable weighed down by a chatty AI "coach"m.piqsuite.com

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