Contactless monitoring of heart rate (HR) can improve passive and continuous tracking of cardiovascular activities and overall people's health. Remote photoplethysmography (rPPG) using a camera eliminates the need for a wearable device. rPPG-based HR has shown promising results to be accurate and comparable to conventional methods such as contact PPG. Most experiments use stationary subjects while motion is known to affect the accuracy of remote PPG. In this paper, a novel methodology is introduced to enhance the accuracy and reliability of HR monitoring based on rPPG in the presence of physical activities like Yoga. This method quickly and accurately tracks HR and analyzes head motion to exclude unreliable data within short windows of rPPG signals. The method was tested with smartphone video data collected from 60 subjects when they are doing activities with varying levels of movement. Results show that our method without motion removal improves the accuracy of the HR readings by 0.7 bpm, reaching 3.57 bpm on average for a 30-sec-window. The accuracy is further improved by another 1.3 bpm after removing the motion artifacts, and reaches 2.29 bpm.Clinical relevance- The enhancement of HR readings from shorter rPPG signal with motion tolerance during physical activities can ultimately help with a more reliable HR tracking of people in uncontrolled settings like home which is a critical step towards remote health-care or wellness tracking.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/EMBC40787.2023.10340279DOI Listing

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