Google has introduced an improved fitness app which uses smartphone camera capabilities to measure heart rate and breath. Google Fit has already introduced smartphone sensors to figure out how far people walk or how many calories they have burned, but new features rolling out to Google Pixel phones will add pulse and breathing to health data crunched by the app.
A modification coming in the next month to the Fit app tailored for Google-made Pixel smartphones will use camera sensors detect someone’s chest moving as they breathe, calculating their respiration rate. Placing a fingertip on the lens will let Fit use a camera to determine how fast someone’s heart is beating based on how skin color changes as blood is pumped, members of the team explained.
Data processing is all done on smartphones, and users will have the option to save results securely in their accounts at Google data centres. The Fit app lets users set activity or health goals and weaves in artificial intelligence to coach them about how to achieve objectives.
According to Google health technologies team leader Shwetak Patel, sensors and software that make it possible to take stunning photos with smartphones or automatically adapt streaming video to how handsets are held can be used to sense respiration and heartbeat.