Measuring Sleep: Accuracy, Sensitivity, and Specificity of Wrist Actigraphy Compared to Polysomnography
Oregon Health & Science University · Harvard University · +6 more institutions
Indexed incrossrefpubmed
Abstract
Objectives
We validated actigraphy for detecting sleep and wakefulness versus polysomnography (PSG).
Design
Actigraphy and polysomnography were simultaneously collected during sleep laboratory admissions. All studies involved 8.5 h time in bed, except for sleep restriction studies. Epochs (30-sec; n = 232,849) were characterized for sensitivity (actigraphy = sleep when PSG = sleep), specificity (actigraphy = wake when PSG = wake), and accuracy (total proportion correct); the amount of wakefulness after sleep onset (WASO) was also assessed. A generalized estimating equation (GEE) model included age, gender, insomnia diagnosis, and daytime/nighttime sleep timing factors.
Citation impact
1,032
total citations
- FWCI
- 24.86
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 31
Citations per year
Authors
9Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Actigraphy
- Polysomnography
- Sleep onset
- Wakefulness
- Insomnia
- Medicine
- Sleep (system call)
- Population
UN Sustainable Development Goals
- Quality Education
No related works found for this paper.
Funding
- APAlfred P. Sloan Foundation
- PPfizer
- GGlaxoSmithKline
- WFWake Forest University
- CFCenter for Health Design
- SSunovion
- AFAdministration for Children and Families
- AOAcademy of Architecture for Health
- NINational Institute of Child Health and Human DevelopmentAwards: U01HD051217, U01HD051276, U01HD051256, U01HD059773, U01HD051217, U01HD051218, U01HD051256, U01HD051276, U01HD051218