Insights: Inside or Out? This Wearable Can Tell

June 18, 2021

Inside or Out? This Wearable Can Tell
Wiring diagram of the device.
A team of Penn State researchers has developed a wearable device with sensors that collect data on light sources, including wavelength and frequency, to detect whether the user is inside or outside. The researchers believe the portable device has the potential to help scientists better understand the health benefits of outdoor lighting and pave the way for wearables that nudge users to get outdoors more often.

According to Matthew Rhudy, assistant professor of engineering, outdoor and indoor lighting have distinct differences that sensors can detect. While the sun gives off vast quantities of light in the ultraviolet spectrum, indoor lighting tends to be in the visible spectrum. “The UV index alone is pretty good at detecting it,” Rhudy says. “If it’s detecting a significant amount of UV index, there’s a pretty good chance you’re outside.” Light intensity, even if it’s cloudy, as well as differences in color temperature, are also signals for exposure to outdoor lighting.

Initial testing was done by placing the device in fixed locations to collect light data for approximately one hour. A total of 3,640 indoor and 1,368 outdoor samples were collected. Going forward, additional funding could lead to a larger long-term project that explores additions such as a wireless component with the ability to transmit data.

Inside or Out? This Wearable Can Tell
Picture of data acquisition system with exposed electronics (left) and shirt-worn application (right).
Courtesy of Science Direct/Creative Commons CC-BY-NC-ND (https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ohx.2020.e00157)