Interhemispheric differences of electroencephalography signal characteristics in different sleep stages
Publiceringsår
2024
Upphovspersoner
Tashakori, Masoumeh; Rusanen, Matias; Karhu, Tuomas; Grote, Ludger; Nath, Rajdeep Kumar; Leppänen, Timo; Nikkonen, Sami
Abstrakt
<p>Objective: The current electroencephalography (EEG) measurement setup is complex, laborious to set up, and uncomfortable for patients. We hypothesize that differences in EEG signal characteristics for sleep staging between the left and right hemispheres are negligible; therefore, there is potential to simplify the current measurement setup. We aimed to investigate the technical hemispheric differences in EEG signal characteristics along with electrooculography (EOG) signals during different sleep stages. Methods: Type II portable polysomnography (PSG) recordings of 50 patients were studied. Amplitudes and power spectral densities (PSDs) of the EEG and EOG signals were compared between the left (C3-M2, F3-M2, O1-M2, and E1-M2) and the right (C4-M1, F4-M1, O2-M1, and E2-M2) hemispheres. Regression analysis was performed to investigate the potential influence of sleep stages on the hemispheric differences in PSDs. Wilcoxon signed-rank tests were also employed to calculate the effect size of hemispheres across different frequency bands and sleep stages. Results: The results showed statistically significant differences in signal characteristics between hemispheres, but the absolute differences were minor. The median hemispheric differences in amplitudes were smaller than 3 μv with large interquartile ranges during all sleep stages. The absolute and relative PSD characteristics were highly similar between hemispheres in different sleep stages. Additionally, there were negligible differences in the effect size between hemispheres across all sleep stages. Conclusions: Technical signal differences between hemispheres were minor across all sleep stages, indicating that both hemispheres contain similar information needed for sleep staging. A reduced measurement setup could be suitable for sleep staging without the loss of relevant information.</p>
Visa merOrganisationer och upphovspersoner
Teknologiska forskningscentralen VTT Ab
Nath Rajdeep Kumar
Publikationstyp
Publikationsform
Artikel
Moderpublikationens typ
Tidning
Artikelstyp
En originalartikel
Målgrupp
VetenskapligKollegialt utvärderad
Kollegialt utvärderadUKM:s publikationstyp
A1 Originalartikel i en vetenskaplig tidskriftPublikationskanalens uppgifter
Journal
Volym
117
Sidor
201-208
ISSN
Publikationsforum
Publikationsforumsnivå
1
Öppen tillgång
Öppen tillgänglighet i förläggarens tjänst
Ja
Öppen tillgång till publikationskanalen
Delvis öppen publikationskanal
Licens för förläggarens version
CC BY
Parallellsparad
Nej
Övriga uppgifter
Vetenskapsområden
Medicinsk teknik; Allmänmedicin, inre medicin och annan klinisk medicin; Hälsovetenskap
Nyckelord
[object Object],[object Object],[object Object]
Förlagets internationalitet
Internationell
Språk
engelska
Internationell sampublikation
Ja
Sampublikation med ett företag
Nej
DOI
10.1016/j.sleep.2024.03.024
Publikationen ingår i undervisnings- och kulturministeriets datainsamling
Ja