Abstract

This paper presents the contactless measuring of breathing using the MS Kinect depth sensor and compares the results obtained with records of breathing taken by polysomnography (PSG). We explore the methods of signal denoising, resampling, and spectral analysis of acquired data as well as feature extraction and their Bayesian classification. The proposed methodology was applied for analysis of the long-term monitoring of individuals who were observed simultaneously by PSG and MS Kinect in the sleep laboratory. After time synchronization of polysomnographic and MS Kinect video data, features were extracted from both signals and compared. The average error of the frequency while being evaluated by MS Kinect that was related to that obtained by PSG was 3.75 %. The mean accuracy of the Bayesian classification of features into two classes (i.e. wake or sleep) was 88.90 and 88.95 % for the PSG and MS Kinect measurements, respectively. The strong likeness of features supports the hypothesis that contactless techniques may represent a valid alternative to the present approach of sleep monitoring, thereby allowing data acquisition in the home environment as well.

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