Photograph of January 4, 2015: Zepp sensors and applications demonstrated at CES. The system analyzes the movements of the user during exercise and compares them with the movements of professional athletes (AP Photo/John Locher). It's not just how many steps you take each day or how many calories you burn. Wearable device trackers and health monitors are becoming more common and diverse, but how do you plan to use that data? Paul Landau, chairman of British fitness tracker maker Fitbug, said: "Many people buy wearables, but they don't." Landau participated in the International Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas last week, launching a series of 12 Zhou’s fitness training program provides specific personalized advice for people to improve their physical appearance. He said: "If you want to help people, you don't just need self-data tracking." Health monitors are not just for fitness. Some startups and large technology companies are promoting various data uses for wearable sensors at the show – from sports to pregnancy. Other companies are trying to synthesize data from different sources, and can comprehensively view and interpret the data to make the value of the data. This is useful, but it also raises concerns about privacy issues. Turn data into an experience Jason Fass of Zepp Labs in Silicon Valley said: "Now many wearable devices just throw data to users, we expect to be able to synthesize data and turn it into an experience." The lab is mainly for tennis and baseball. And golf enthusiasts make small wearable motion sensors. Fass said in an interview at the International Consumer Electronics Show that Zepp has been selling sensors for a year, but he hopes that amateur athletes will discover the value of Zepp's new smartphone app. The app can animate the user's swings and compare them to the actions of professional athletes in the video. This trend is not limited to the field of sports. A Canadian company, InteraXon, showed a headset that monitors brain activity by tracking electrical impulses. It connects to an app that provides brain relaxation exercises or concentration, but its founder, Ariel Garten, predicts that the technology may be combined with other technologies—for example, to automatically adjust the user's iTunes playlist. There are also exhibitors who showcased wearable motion sensors designed for elderly people living alone, keeping records of daily activities, and alerting family members if older people fall or do not follow the usual lifestyle in the house. Prima-Temp, based in Colorado, introduced a cervical ring containing an electronic sensor to track the internal temperature of a woman's body. It can send the best pregnancy to the user or her partner's smartphone. In recent years, sensors that can track sports box health data have become a must-have product for CES. One out of every 10 Americans has a fitness tracker – a wristband that can monitor heart rate, breathing or exercise, according to the Consumer Electronics Association (CEA), which is organized at the end of the year. Gartner Research Inc. Gartner estimates that worldwide sales of such devices exceeded 70 million last year, and does not include more sophisticated wearable devices, such as devices that can monitor body temperature, blood sugar levels, or other health indicators. Shawn DuBravac, chief economist at CES, said that as people's freshness of these devices declines, consumers are less interested in "how technology can do", but instead focus on "what is the significance of these technologies." Human Ultrasound Scanner,Color Doppler Machine,Doppler Ultrasound Scanner,Notebook Color Doppler Scanner Mianyang United Ultrasound Electronics Co., Ltd , https://www.uniultrasonic.com