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1.
J Sleep Res ; 4(2): 119-130, 1995 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10607150

RESUMO

Although various investigators have suggested algorithms for the automatic detection of eye movements during sleep, objective comparisons of the proposed methods have previously been difficult due to different recording arrangements of different investigators. In this study the results of five eye movement detection algorithms applied to the same data were compared to visually scored data. The percentages of true and false detections are given for various threshold levels in rapid and slow eye movement detections. The methods gave best results when they were used with the same electrode montage they were designed for but the performance decreased when other montages were used. Subtracting the cross-talk of EEG delta activity improved the correctness of eye movement detections.

2.
J Sleep Res ; 2(1): 28-33, 1993 Mar.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10607067

RESUMO

The aim of this study was to compare the extent to which activity and immobility measures are related to sleep stages and sleep cycles in order to improve the informative value of actigraphic assessment of sleep. We therefore performed simultaneous ambulatory polysomnography and wrist-activity monitoring (AM) in 14 healthy male subjects without sleep complaints. In this context, a simple method for transforming raw motor activity data into a time-series reflecting onset and duration of activity and immobility clusters is introduced. Our results demonstrate that nocturnal AM measures were significantly affected by sleep stage. Low activity levels and particularly prolonged episodes of uninterrupted immobility were associated with increasing sleep depth. On the other hand, high activity levels and prolonged episodes of activity were related to intermittent wakefulness during sleep. Our results suggest that measures reflecting the occurrence and duration of activity and immobility clusters provide a better approach in studying the relationship between activity/immobility and sleep stages. Except for the duration of uninterrupted immobility episodes, which showed a significant decrease in the fourth cycle, none of the AM measures showed a significant cycle-to-cycle variation. Consequently, mean nocturnal motor activity measures provide an accurate reflection of the total sleep period. However, none of the AM-derived measures seems useful in evaluating the cycle structure during sleep.

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