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Energy Efficient Healthcare Monitoring System using 5G Task Offloading T Sigwele; A Naveed; M Susanto; M Ali; Y F Hu
Journal of Engineering and Scientific Research Vol. 1 No. 2 (2019)
Publisher : Faculty of Engineering, Universitas Lampung Jl. Soemantri Brojonegoro No.1 Bandar Lampung, Indonesia 35141

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.23960/jesr.v1i2.142

Abstract

Healthcare expenses can be significantly reduced, and lives saved byenabling the continuous monitoring of patient health remotely using WirelessBody Sensor Networks (WBSN). However, an energy efficient mobile gateway(e.g. 5G smartphone) is required which moves with the patient in real time toprocess the data from the bio sensors without depleting the battery. Thispaper proposes a 5G based healthcare cardiovascular disease RemoteMonitoring system called 5GREM using Electrocardiogram (ECG) biosensor as a BSN device. The aim is to monitor and analyse the patient’s heartrhythms and send emergency alerts during irregularities to the nearestcaregivers, ambulance or physician to minimize heart attacks and heartfailures while saving energy. Since ECG signal execution is computerintensive, requests from the ECG sensor are either executed locally on thegateway, offloaded to nearby mobile devices or to the 5G edge whileconsidering the battery level, CPU level, transmission power, delays and taskfail rate.
The Threat No More? Indonesian Atheists, Pancasila, and the Search for A Common Moral Ground M Ali
Journal of Asian Social Science Research Vol. 5 No. 1 (2023): Journal of Asian Social Science Research
Publisher : Centre for Asian Social Science Research (CASSR), Faculty of Social and Political Sciences, UIN Sunan Gunung Djati Bandung

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.15575/jassr.v5i1.77

Abstract

The fall of Soeharto's rule in 1998 marked the beginning of a new era in Indonesian democratization, allowing old and new voices in the public realm, including atheists who defined themselves as no less Indonesian and, more crucially, no less moral than the rest. Globalization and increasing access to information and communication technology facilitated this. This article analyses how and why Indonesian atheists have become more outspoken in recent years about their lack of religious belief and defence of their denial of the existence of any deity or gods in response to their upbringing, education, news about religious radicalism, liberalism, and scientific advancement. These atheists provide context for atheism in Indonesia. They also redefine Indonesia as a non-religious nation-state, despite the country's Muslim population and efforts and aspirations to bring it closer to an Islamic state or culture. In numerous official declarations and textbooks, Indonesia has historically been referred to as neither a theocracy nor a secular state. It is a Pancasila state. Indonesian atheists redefine the country as a whole by reinventing Pancasila and Bhineka Tunggal Ika. They are not opposed to collaboration and unity. Instead of sacred or religious principles, they emphasize humanity and morality as common values.