IEEE Access (Jan 2018)

Unobtrusive Sleep Monitoring Using Cardiac, Breathing and Movements Activities: An Exhaustive Review

  • Georges Matar,
  • Jean-Marc Lina,
  • Julie Carrier,
  • Georges Kaddoum

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1109/ACCESS.2018.2865487
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6
pp. 45129 – 45152

Abstract

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At least 50% of the world's elderly population, whose range is fast growing, experience disturbed sleep. Sleep studies have become an extensive approach serving as a diagnostic tool for health-care professionals. Currently, the gold standard is polysomnography (PSG) recorded in a sleep laboratory. However, it is obtrusive, requires qualified technicians, and is time and cost expensive. With the introduction of commercial off-the-shelf technologies in the medical field, alternatives to the conventional methods have been conceived to ensure sleep stages and sleep quality detection, which may be now used at home on several nights. Cardio respiratory and physical activities abide the most promising physiological measurements to detect sleep stages without complete PSG. The statistically proven impacts and budgets related to sleep disorders are phenomenal, showing that the field needs more research. This paper aims at providing the reader with a multidimensional research perspective by presenting a review of research literature on developments made in unobtrusive sleep assessment. Additionally, a categorization of current approaches is presented based on methodological considerations, from data acquisition frameworks and physiological measurements, to information processing. Subsequently, limitations and challenges facing current solutions are discussed, and open research areas are highlighted, which we hope would pave the way for future research endeavors addressing the question: how to assess sleep stages and sleep quality less intrusively, and reliably?

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