Scientific Reports (Jan 2024)

A robust deep learning detector for sleep spindles and K-complexes: towards population norms

  • Nicolás I. Tapia-Rivas,
  • Pablo A. Estévez,
  • José A. Cortes-Briones

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-50736-7
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 18

Abstract

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Abstract Sleep spindles (SSs) and K-complexes (KCs) are brain patterns involved in cognitive functions that appear during sleep. Large-scale sleep studies would benefit from precise and robust automatic sleep event detectors, capable of adapting the variability in both electroencephalography (EEG) signals and expert annotation rules. We introduce the Sleep EEG Event Detector (SEED), a deep learning system that outperforms existing approaches in SS and KC detection, reaching an F1-score of 80.5% and 83.7%, respectively, on the MASS2 dataset. SEED transfers well and requires minimal fine-tuning for new datasets and annotation styles. Remarkably, SEED substantially reduces the required amount of annotated data by using a novel pretraining approach that leverages the rule-based detector A7. An analysis of 11,224 subjects revealed that SEED's detections provide better estimates of SS population statistics than existing approaches. SEED is a powerful resource for obtaining sleep-event statistics that could be useful for establishing population norms.