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Sleep Validity of a Non-Contact Bedside Movement and Respiration-Sensing Device.


ABSTRACT:

Study objectives

To assess the sleep detection and staging validity of a non-contact, commercially available bedside bio-motion sensing device (S+, ResMed) and evaluate the impact of algorithm updates.

Methods

Polysomnography data from 27 healthy adult participants was compared epoch-by-epoch to synchronized data that were recorded and staged by actigraphy and S+. An update to the S+ algorithm (common in the rapidly evolving commercial sleep tracker industry) permitted comparison of the original (S+V1) and updated (S+V2) versions.

Results

Sleep detection accuracy by S+V1 (93.3%), S+V2 (93.8%), and actigraphy (96.0%) was high; wake detection accuracy by each (69.6%, 73.1%, and 47.9%, respectively) was low. Higher overall S+ specificity, compared to actigraphy, was driven by higher accuracy in detecting wake before sleep onset (WBSO), which differed between S+V2 (90.4%) and actigraphy (46.5%). Stage detection accuracy by the S+ did not exceed 67.6% (for stage N2 sleep, by S+V2) for any stage. Performance is compared to previously established variance in polysomnography scored by humans: a performance standard which commercial devices should ideally strive to reach.

Conclusions

Similar limitations in detecting wake after sleep onset (WASO) were found for the S+ as have been previously reported for actigraphy and other commercial sleep tracking devices. S+ WBSO detection was higher than actigraphy, and S+V2 algorithm further improved WASO accuracy. Researchers and clinicians should remain aware of the potential for algorithm updates to impact validity.

Commentary

A commentary on this article appears in this issue on page 935.

SUBMITTER: Schade MM 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC6622509 | biostudies-literature | 2019 Jul

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Sleep Validity of a Non-Contact Bedside Movement and Respiration-Sensing Device.

Schade Margeaux M MM   Bauer Christopher E CE   Murray Billie R BR   Gahan Luke L   Doheny Emer P EP   Kilroy Hannah H   Zaffaroni Alberto A   Montgomery-Downs Hawley E HE  

Journal of clinical sleep medicine : JCSM : official publication of the American Academy of Sleep Medicine 20190715 7


<h4>Study objectives</h4>To assess the sleep detection and staging validity of a non-contact, commercially available bedside bio-motion sensing device (S+, ResMed) and evaluate the impact of algorithm updates.<h4>Methods</h4>Polysomnography data from 27 healthy adult participants was compared epoch-by-epoch to synchronized data that were recorded and staged by actigraphy and S+. An update to the S+ algorithm (common in the rapidly evolving commercial sleep tracker industry) permitted comparison  ...[more]

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