Eyelid Gesture Control using Wearable Tunnelling Magnetoresistance Sensors

Asfand Tanwear, Hadi Heidari, Elvira Paz, Tim Bohnert, Ricardo Ferreira
2020 2020 27th IEEE International Conference on Electronics, Circuits and Systems (ICECS)  
Everyday technologies are more than ever digitized with internet of thing's systems and disabled individuals may feel excluded. Handsfree gesture approaches such as eye movements/blinking can enhance the interacting with modern technology. This work presents eye blinking for eyelid gesture control using a wearable magnetic system consisting of a flexible magnetic strip on the eyelid and spintronic magnetic sensors with its analogue front-end circuit. To detect eye blinking, tunnelling
more » ... istance (TMR) sensors with sensitivity of 11mV/V/Oe are embedded into an eyeglass frame. For successful detection of the small magnetic field generated by 6 mm diameter with 1 mm thickness magnetic strip on the eyelid, a sensor readout circuit is designed to amplify the collected signal and cancel the external noise and offset. The circuit is capable of filtering low frequencies <0.5 Hz and DC offsets. High frequencies above >28 Hz is filtered for both magnetic field and eyelid movement noise. Each TMR sensor circuit is equipped with a fixed-gain amplifier for detecting low-magnetic field from the mm-sized magnetic strips. The blinks can be repeated within a set time frame and since both eyelids will be detected, multiple command combinations are possible for classification. Based on magnetic field simulation results, the circuit was simulated and has shown high repeatability and stability that can classify eyeblinks based on amplitude threshold. As a result, the signal can be scaled and classified on a Bluetooth microcontroller capable of connecting to various Bluetooth enabled devices for the disabled individuals to communicate external technology with.
doi:10.1109/icecs49266.2020.9294878 fatcat:nqvc3m63jng5naiavtgfkhma3a