Abstract

High quality sleep monitoring is done using EEG electrodes placed on the skin. This has traditionally required assistance by an expert when the equipment needed to mounted. However, this creates a limitation in how cheap and easy it can be to record sleep in the subject's own home. Here we present a data set of 120 home recordings of sleep, in which subjects use self-applied ear-EEG monitoring equipment. We compare this data set to a previously recorded data set with both ear-EEG and polysomnography, which was applied by an expert. Clinical relevance - On all tested metrics, self applied sleep recordings behaved the same as expert applied. This indicates that ear-EEG can reliably be used as a home sleep monitor, even when subjects apply the equipment themselves.

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