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Flex-Printed Ear-EEG Sensors for Adequate Sleep Staging at Home

A comfortable, discrete and robust recording of the sleep EEG signal at home is a desirable goal but has been difficult to achieve. We investigate how well flex-printed electrodes are suitable for sleep monitoring tasks in a smartphone-based home environment. The cEEGrid ear-EEG sensor has already b...

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Autores principales: da Silva Souto, Carlos F., Pätzold, Wiebke, Wolf, Karen Insa, Paul, Marina, Matthiesen, Ida, Bleichner, Martin G., Debener, Stefan
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8522006/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34713159
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fdgth.2021.688122
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author da Silva Souto, Carlos F.
Pätzold, Wiebke
Wolf, Karen Insa
Paul, Marina
Matthiesen, Ida
Bleichner, Martin G.
Debener, Stefan
author_facet da Silva Souto, Carlos F.
Pätzold, Wiebke
Wolf, Karen Insa
Paul, Marina
Matthiesen, Ida
Bleichner, Martin G.
Debener, Stefan
author_sort da Silva Souto, Carlos F.
collection PubMed
description A comfortable, discrete and robust recording of the sleep EEG signal at home is a desirable goal but has been difficult to achieve. We investigate how well flex-printed electrodes are suitable for sleep monitoring tasks in a smartphone-based home environment. The cEEGrid ear-EEG sensor has already been tested in the laboratory for measuring night sleep. Here, 10 participants slept at home and were equipped with a cEEGrid and a portable amplifier (mBrainTrain, Serbia). In addition, the EEG of Fpz, EOG_L and EOG_R was recorded. All signals were recorded wirelessly with a smartphone. On average, each participant provided data for M = 7.48 h. An expert sleep scorer created hypnograms and annotated grapho-elements according to AASM based on the EEG of Fpz, EOG_L and EOG_R twice, which served as the baseline agreement for further comparisons. The expert scorer also created hypnograms using bipolar channels based on combinations of cEEGrid channels only, and bipolar cEEGrid channels complemented by EOG channels. A comparison of the hypnograms based on frontal electrodes with the ones based on cEEGrid electrodes (κ = 0.67) and the ones based on cEEGrid complemented by EOG channels (κ = 0.75) both showed a substantial agreement, with the combination including EOG channels showing a significantly better outcome than the one without (p = 0.006). Moreover, signal excerpts of the conventional channels containing grapho-elements were correlated with those of the cEEGrid in order to determine the cEEGrid channel combination that optimally represents the annotated grapho-elements. The results show that the grapho-elements were well-represented by the front-facing electrode combinations. The correlation analysis of the grapho-elements resulted in an average correlation coefficient of 0.65 for the most suitable electrode configuration of the cEEGrid. The results confirm that sleep stages can be identified with electrodes placement around the ear. This opens up opportunities for miniaturized ear-EEG systems that may be self-applied by users.
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spelling pubmed-85220062021-10-27 Flex-Printed Ear-EEG Sensors for Adequate Sleep Staging at Home da Silva Souto, Carlos F. Pätzold, Wiebke Wolf, Karen Insa Paul, Marina Matthiesen, Ida Bleichner, Martin G. Debener, Stefan Front Digit Health Digital Health A comfortable, discrete and robust recording of the sleep EEG signal at home is a desirable goal but has been difficult to achieve. We investigate how well flex-printed electrodes are suitable for sleep monitoring tasks in a smartphone-based home environment. The cEEGrid ear-EEG sensor has already been tested in the laboratory for measuring night sleep. Here, 10 participants slept at home and were equipped with a cEEGrid and a portable amplifier (mBrainTrain, Serbia). In addition, the EEG of Fpz, EOG_L and EOG_R was recorded. All signals were recorded wirelessly with a smartphone. On average, each participant provided data for M = 7.48 h. An expert sleep scorer created hypnograms and annotated grapho-elements according to AASM based on the EEG of Fpz, EOG_L and EOG_R twice, which served as the baseline agreement for further comparisons. The expert scorer also created hypnograms using bipolar channels based on combinations of cEEGrid channels only, and bipolar cEEGrid channels complemented by EOG channels. A comparison of the hypnograms based on frontal electrodes with the ones based on cEEGrid electrodes (κ = 0.67) and the ones based on cEEGrid complemented by EOG channels (κ = 0.75) both showed a substantial agreement, with the combination including EOG channels showing a significantly better outcome than the one without (p = 0.006). Moreover, signal excerpts of the conventional channels containing grapho-elements were correlated with those of the cEEGrid in order to determine the cEEGrid channel combination that optimally represents the annotated grapho-elements. The results show that the grapho-elements were well-represented by the front-facing electrode combinations. The correlation analysis of the grapho-elements resulted in an average correlation coefficient of 0.65 for the most suitable electrode configuration of the cEEGrid. The results confirm that sleep stages can be identified with electrodes placement around the ear. This opens up opportunities for miniaturized ear-EEG systems that may be self-applied by users. Frontiers Media S.A. 2021-06-30 /pmc/articles/PMC8522006/ /pubmed/34713159 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fdgth.2021.688122 Text en Copyright © 2021 da Silva Souto, Pätzold, Wolf, Paul, Matthiesen, Bleichner and Debener. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Digital Health
da Silva Souto, Carlos F.
Pätzold, Wiebke
Wolf, Karen Insa
Paul, Marina
Matthiesen, Ida
Bleichner, Martin G.
Debener, Stefan
Flex-Printed Ear-EEG Sensors for Adequate Sleep Staging at Home
title Flex-Printed Ear-EEG Sensors for Adequate Sleep Staging at Home
title_full Flex-Printed Ear-EEG Sensors for Adequate Sleep Staging at Home
title_fullStr Flex-Printed Ear-EEG Sensors for Adequate Sleep Staging at Home
title_full_unstemmed Flex-Printed Ear-EEG Sensors for Adequate Sleep Staging at Home
title_short Flex-Printed Ear-EEG Sensors for Adequate Sleep Staging at Home
title_sort flex-printed ear-eeg sensors for adequate sleep staging at home
topic Digital Health
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8522006/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34713159
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fdgth.2021.688122
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