Abstract
This article describes a detailed methodology for the A-phase classification of the cyclic alternating patterns (CAPs) present in sleep electroencephalography (EEG). CAPs are a valuable EEG marker of sleep instability and represent an important pattern with which to analyze additional characteristics of sleep processes, and A-phase manifestations have been linked to some specific conditions. CAP phase detection and classification are not commonly carried out routinely due to the time and attention this problem requires (and if present, CAP labels are user-dependent, visually evaluated, and hand-made); thus, an automatic tool to solve the CAP classification problem is presented. The classification experiments were carried out using a distributional representation of the EEG data obtained from the CAP Sleep Database. For this purpose, data symbolization was performed using the one-dimensional symbolic aggregate approximation (1d-SAX), followed by the vectorization of symbolic data with a trained Doc2Vec model and a final classification with ten classic machine learning models for two separate validation strategies. The best results were obtained using a support vector classifier with a radial basis kernel. For hold-out validation, the best F1 Score was 0.7651; for stratified 10-fold cross-validation, the best F1 Score was 0.7611 ± 0.0133. This illustrates that the proposed methodology is suitable for CAP classification.
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