Probabilities of False Alarm for Vital Sign Detection on the Basis of a Doppler Radar System

Sensors (Basel). 2018 Feb 26;18(3):694. doi: 10.3390/s18030694.

Abstract

Vital detection on the basis of Doppler radars has drawn a great deal of attention from researchers because of its high potential for applications in biomedicine, surveillance, and finding people alive under debris during natural hazards. In this research, the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) of the remote vital-sign detection system is investigated. On the basis of different types of noise, such as phase noise, Gaussian noise, leakage noise between the transmitting and receiving antennae, and so on, the SNR of the system has first been examined. Then the research has focused on the investigation of the detection and false alarm probabilities of the system when the transmission link between the human and the radar sensor system took the Nakagami-m channel model. The analytical model for the false alarm and the detection probabilities of the system have been derived. The proposed theoretical models for the SNR and detection probability match with the simulation and measurement results. These theoretical models have the potential to be used as good references for the hardware development of the vital-sign detection radar sensor system.

Keywords: Doppler radar; breathing signal; detection probability; finding survivors; heart beat; vital signals.

MeSH terms

  • Humans
  • Models, Theoretical
  • Noise
  • Probability
  • Radar*
  • Signal-To-Noise Ratio