Automatic Segmentation of Actigraphy Data Utilising Gradient Boosting Algorithm

As the popularity of decentralised clinical trials increases, there is a need to have a tool enabling remote assessment of sleep, while having good consistency with the golden standard, i.e. with polysomnography (PSG). This study aims to introduce a new approach to sleep assessment that utilises the...

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Published in2021 44th International Conference on Telecommunications and Signal Processing (TSP) pp. 399 - 402
Main Authors Mikulec, Marek, Mekyska, Jiri, Sigmund, Jan, Galaz, Zoltan, Brabenec, Lubos, Moravkova, Ivona, Rektorova, Irena
Format Conference Proceeding
LanguageEnglish
Published IEEE 26.07.2021
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DOI10.1109/TSP52935.2021.9522650

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Summary:As the popularity of decentralised clinical trials increases, there is a need to have a tool enabling remote assessment of sleep, while having good consistency with the golden standard, i.e. with polysomnography (PSG). This study aims to introduce a new approach to sleep assessment that utilises the modelling of actigraphy data by a gradient boosting algorithm. The method is compared to a conventional baseline technique in terms of sleep/wake stages detection accuracy in a dataset containing 55 recordings of actigraphy and PSG (acquired from 28 subjects). In addition, we explored how well the outputs of the new method agree with data acquired via sleep diaries in another dataset including 150 recordings (22 subjects). With 97% sensitivity and 73%specificity, the new method significantly outperformed the baseline one in modelling the PSG ground truth. On the other hand, it had a lower agreement with the patient-reported outcomes. The results suggest that a combination of both approaches could be a good alternative to the golden standard in remote sleep assessment studies.
DOI:10.1109/TSP52935.2021.9522650