Now with that said, while a discrete device that occupies some space that I occupy is nice and all, a wearable would be even better in many cases. It includes all of the same inputs, but condensed into a wearable package. This, however, could be difficult to package in a somewhat sleek manner given the devices available to us. This will be a reach goal.
Regardless of what form this takes, the general flow of information can be shown in this chart:
Here are the materials I will need regardless of the form this project takes:
Some microcontroller (Arduino, Particle Photon, etc., I have a few UNO R3s)
Temperature sensor (have?)
Heart rate monitor (will order)
Skin conductivity measuring tool (currently in development, need to determine suitable op-amp…)
20×4 LCD display (have)
Piezoelectric buzzer (have both active and passive)
Numeric keypad (have)
The maquette ended up being very barebones and completely nonfunctional, but here it is anyway. Right now, it’s missing the LCD Display, and some components are standing in for others while I wait for the actual components to arrive. This is the bare minimum device’s footprint (roughly).
The LCD is missing. Pretend it’s there for now…
Final Materials list (that needs to be ordered):
Grove GSR sensor
Pulse Oximeter
Heart rate monitor (fallback in case PulseOx does not work)
…and first test of newly-acquired Grove GSR sensor…
My own Galvanic Skin Response fluctuating as I observe the progression of #Indecision2020. At the time, I didn’t quite have the data range set properly. This has since been fixed.
Four key questions that I need to answer about this device…
Attempting to answer 1, 2, and 3, as well as giving a general idea of the placement in my bedroom (opposite to project 1, as it turns out)…
Attempting to answer question 4…
General view of what the device’s main control panel will look like…
General layout of the device itself…
General layout of the part that connects to my (presumably right) arm…