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Estimating sleep parameters using an accelerometer without sleep diary.

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Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Wrist-worn accelerometers can estimate sleep without diaries. This algorithm accurately detects sleep periods, valuable for large population studies like UK Biobank.

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Area of Science:

  • Biomedical Engineering
  • Sleep Science
  • Wearable Technology

Background:

  • Wrist-worn accelerometers are increasingly used in large-scale population research for objective health monitoring.
  • Accurate estimation of sleep parameters from accelerometer data is crucial, but often relies on concurrent sleep diaries.
  • The absence of sleep diaries in large cohorts (e.g., UK Biobank) presents a challenge for sleep data analysis.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To develop and validate a heuristic algorithm for estimating sleep parameters from raw accelerometer data without requiring sleep diaries.
  • To assess the accuracy of the algorithm's detected sleep period time window (SPT-window) against traditional methods.

Main Methods:

  • A heuristic algorithm was developed using the variance in estimated z-axis angle and basic assumptions about sleep interruptions.
  • The algorithm's SPT-window was compared against sleep diaries in 3752 participants (aged 60-82 years).
  • Algorithm accuracy was further validated against polysomnography in 28 sleep clinic patients and 22 healthy good sleepers.

Main Results:

  • The algorithm's SPT-window showed a slight difference compared to sleep diaries: 10.9 minutes longer in men and 2.9 minutes longer in women.
  • The mean C-statistic for detecting the SPT-window against polysomnography was 0.86 in clinic-based sleepers and 0.83 in healthy sleepers.
  • The study demonstrated the algorithm's accuracy in detecting the sleep period time window.

Conclusions:

  • The developed heuristic algorithm accurately estimates sleep period time windows from wrist-worn accelerometer data, even without sleep diaries.
  • This algorithm is particularly valuable for analyzing sleep in large-scale population studies where sleep diaries are not feasible, such as the UK Biobank.
  • The findings support the use of accelerometers as a reliable tool for objective sleep assessment in diverse research settings.