Artículos de revistas
Seeking a fingerprint: analysis of point processes in actigraphy recording
Fecha
2016-05Registro en:
Gudowska Nowak, Ewa; Ochab, Jeremi K.; Oles, Katarzyna; Beldzik, Ewa; Chialvo, Dante Renato; et al.; Seeking a fingerprint: analysis of point processes in actigraphy recording; IOP Publishing; Journal of Statistical Mechanics: Theory and Experiment; 2016; 5; 5-2016; 1-19
1742-5468
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Gudowska Nowak, Ewa
Ochab, Jeremi K.
Oles, Katarzyna
Beldzik, Ewa
Chialvo, Dante Renato
Domagalik, Aleksandra
Fafrowicz, Magdalena
Marek, Tadeusz
Nowak, Maciej A.
Oginska, Halszka
Szwed, Jerzy
Tyburczyk, Jacek
Resumen
Motor activity of humans displays complex temporal fluctuations which can be characterised by scale-invariant statistics, thus demonstrating that structure and fluctuations of such kinetics remain similar over a broad range of time scales. Previous studies on humans regularly deprived of sleep or suffering from sleep disorders predicted a change in the invariant scale parameters with respect to those for healthy subjects. In this study we investigate the signal patterns from actigraphy recordings by means of characteristic measures of fractional point processes. We analyse spontaneous locomotor activity of healthy individuals recorded during a week of regular sleep and a week of chronic partial sleep deprivation. Behavioural symptoms of lack of sleep can be evaluated by analysing statistics of duration times during active and resting states, and alteration of behavioural organisation can be assessed by analysis of power laws detected in the event count distribution, distribution of waiting times between consecutive movements and detrended fluctuation analysis of recorded time series. We claim that among different measures characterising complexity of the actigraphy recordings and their variations implied by chronic sleep distress, the exponents characterising slopes of survival functions in resting states are the most effective biomarkers distinguishing between healthy and sleep-deprived groups.