Abstract

Surveillance of sleeping posture is essential for bed-ridden patients or individuals at-risk of falling out of bed. Existing sleep posture monitoring and classification systems may not be able to accommodate the covering of a blanket, which represents a barrier to conducting pragmatic studies. The objective of this study was to develop an unobtrusive sleep posture classification that could accommodate the use of a blanket. The system uses an infrared depth camera for data acquisition and a convolutional neural network to classify sleeping postures. We recruited 66 participants (40 men and 26 women) to perform seven major sleeping postures (supine, prone (head left and right), log (left and right) and fetal (left and right)) under four blanket conditions (thick, medium, thin, and no blanket). Data augmentation was conducted by affine transformation and data fusion, generating additional blanket conditions with the original dataset. Coarse-grained (four-posture) and fine-grained (seven-posture) classifiers were trained using two fully connected network layers. For the coarse classification, the log and fetal postures were merged into a side-lying class and the prone class (head left and right) was pooled. The results show a drop of overall F1-score by 8.2% when switching to the fine-grained classifier. In addition, compared to no blanket, a thick blanket reduced the overall F1-scores by 3.5% and 8.9% for the coarse- and fine-grained classifiers, respectively; meanwhile, the lowest performance was seen in classifying the log (right) posture under a thick blanket, with an F1-score of 72.0%. In conclusion, we developed a system that can classify seven types of common sleeping postures under blankets and achieved an F1-score of 88.9%.

Highlights

  • Good sleep is imperative to health and well-being [1]

  • Significant associations have been made between sleep disorders and chronic diseases/conditions such as obesity, diabetes, and hypertension [2,3,4]

  • Poor sleep or sleep disturbance can contribute to depression, anxiety, and other mental or psychiatric conditions [5]

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Summary

Introduction

Good sleep is imperative to health and well-being [1]. Significant associations have been made between sleep disorders and chronic diseases/conditions such as obesity, diabetes, and hypertension [2,3,4]. Poor sleep or sleep disturbance can contribute to depression, anxiety, and other mental or psychiatric conditions [5]. The prevalence of sleep disorders is 47 individuals among every 1000 in the population, while some reports suggest that half the population may experience sleep disorders [6]. In China, more than one-quarter of adolescents have been reported to suffer from sleep disturbance [7]. Insomnia represents the most common sleep disorder and has been investigated using polysomnography, ballistocardiography, photoplethysmography and actigraphy [1]

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