Distinguishing behaviours from the sleep index and long periods of sitting/lying while awake (daytime) #59
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This is a very important question. ActiPASS algorithms are developed and validated with healthy adults. It works with other populations with varying accuracy. One option is to reduce the behaviours it detect and make it more robust. We can do this (disabling/altering certain behaviour detection) step by step and try to understand what works. This will be a compromise (features against accuracy/robustness).
Unfortunately there is no way to tell ActiPASS what are awake times. But we can change how it detects times-in-bed and sleep-interval. For an example by disabling the sleep-algorithm, there will be no sleep-interval and whole 24h will be considered awake. See above answers for various options we have related to times-in-bed and sleep.
We are thinking of making a more robust (but less features, less smart) mode of ActiPASS for populations such as yours. We need to identify what behaviours/activities which are essential, what we can compromise. With populations such as yours, even behaviours such as star-walking and bicycling could be detected erroneously. This is because with limited mobility, ActiPASS automatic individual calibration can go wrong (such an individual calibration is needed for detecting certain behaviours) Perhaps we can collaborate more towards making such a feature. |
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In the attached QC visualisation, the sleep index lasts nearly all day on October 17th (this is also flagged in the warnings). In the attached sleep diary/log for the participant, they have specified that they were awake (ill with a migraine) during this time.
I have been testing with the diary function (using our diary/logs as in the attached), but I’m not completely sure what this does? I did specify in the diary loaded with the data that this was time ‘Awake’, i.e., not to be classed with ‘Bed’ and I can see this in the visualisation - however, this time was still included as part of the sleep index for this participant. This would skew/affect their overall estimated avg sleep index time.
Our population is cancer patients where they may demonstrate long periods of day-time/awake sitting/lying and we would like to be able to class this as such (sedentary time sitting/lying outside of the sleep index), rather than it being part of sleep.
Please can you advise me as to if this would be possible to reclassify within ActiPASS?
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