Depth-Camera-Based Under-Blanket Sleep Posture Classification Using Anatomical Landmark-Guided Deep Learning Model

Author:

Tam Andy Yiu-ChauORCID,Zha Li-Wen,So Bryan Pak-Hei,Lai Derek Ka-Hei,Mao Ye-JiaoORCID,Lim Hyo-Jung,Wong Duo Wai-ChiORCID,Cheung James Chung-WaiORCID

Abstract

Emerging sleep health technologies will have an impact on monitoring patients with sleep disorders. This study proposes a new deep learning model architecture that improves the under-blanket sleep posture classification accuracy by leveraging the anatomical landmark feature through an attention strategy. The system used an integrated visible light and depth camera. Deep learning models (ResNet-34, EfficientNet B4, and ECA-Net50) were trained using depth images. We compared the models with and without an anatomical landmark coordinate input generated with an open-source pose estimation model using visible image data. We recruited 120 participants to perform seven major sleep postures, namely, the supine posture, prone postures with the head turned left and right, left- and right-sided log postures, and left- and right-sided fetal postures under four blanket conditions, including no blanket, thin, medium, and thick. A data augmentation technique was applied to the blanket conditions. The data were sliced at an 8:2 training-to-testing ratio. The results showed that ECA-Net50 produced the best classification results. Incorporating the anatomical landmark features increased the F1 score of ECA-Net50 from 87.4% to 92.2%. Our findings also suggested that the classification performances of deep learning models guided with features of anatomical landmarks were less affected by the interference of blanket conditions.

Funder

Research Institute of Smart Ageing, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University

General Research Fund granted by the Hong Kong Research Grants Council

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

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