Story at a glance
- Scientists at the habits lab at Northwestern Medicine in Evanston, Illinois, have developed the SmokeMon device.
- Worn around the neck, SmokeMon measures the number of puffs, their duration and the time between each drag on the cigarette.
- By providing such granular data, the team hopes the device will help people identify their triggers for smoking and to help them quit.
(WGN) – Wearable tech is heating up and now scientists hope to empower smokers with personalized data and a necklace designed to kick a deadly habit.
Inside the habits lab at Northwestern Medicine in Evanston, Illinois, scientists mimic smoking while pondering a burning question: What causes someone to successfully quit smoking?
The answer, they believe, is data-driven by tracking real-life actions, not self-reported usage.
That’s where the SmokeMon device comes in.
“We can tell how long the person placed the cigarette at the mouth,” said Nabil Alshurafa, a Northwestern Medicine Associate Professor of Preventive Medicine and Computer Science. “Things like our body, the cigarette, the lighter — all these things emit heat.”
The SmokeMon is worn around the neck, and sensors inside the device measure the thermal activity to determine the number of puffs, their duration and the time between each drag on the cigarette.
“All these things could potentially allow us to characterize that smoking behavior in a lot more fine detail,” Alshurafa said.
That could mean an even deeper understanding of tobacco exposure and disease. At the same time, the mechanics allow users to navigate their smoking topography — in other words, what causes them to light up, particularly those who relapse.
“It could be that cup of coffee that triggered you to relapse. It could be that friend you hang out with,” Alshurafa said. “So we can begin to educate people a little bit more about what are these triggers that get them to slip.”
Researchers recently had their study on the SmokeMon published in an Association for Computing Machinery journal. The next step is to partner with smoking cessation programs and use the thermal data to trigger a timely intervention.
“Psychologists have designed different mindfulness interventions or ways of intervening through text messages or videos to get them to prevent the relapse or that next puff or that next cigarette they might actually take,” Alshurafa said.
The SmokeMon developers hope to tweak the tech so e-cigarette users can benefit, as well. And they plan to refine the design, so it looks more like a piece of jewelry.
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