Data quality evaluation in wearable monitoring

Author:

Böttcher SebastianORCID,Vieluf SolveigORCID,Bruno ElisaORCID,Joseph BoneyORCID,Epitashvili NinoORCID,Biondi AndreaORCID,Zabler NicolasORCID,Glasstetter MartinORCID,Dümpelmann MatthiasORCID,Van Laerhoven KristofORCID,Nasseri MonaORCID,Brinkman Benjamin H.ORCID,Richardson Mark P.ORCID,Schulze-Bonhage AndreasORCID,Loddenkemper TobiasORCID

Abstract

AbstractWearable recordings of neurophysiological signals captured from the wrist offer enormous potential for seizure monitoring. Yet, data quality remains one of the most challenging factors that impact data reliability. We suggest a combined data quality assessment tool for the evaluation of multimodal wearable data. We analyzed data from patients with epilepsy from four epilepsy centers. Patients wore wristbands recording accelerometry, electrodermal activity, blood volume pulse, and skin temperature. We calculated data completeness and assessed the time the device was worn (on-body), and modality-specific signal quality scores. We included 37,166 h from 632 patients in the inpatient and 90,776 h from 39 patients in the outpatient setting. All modalities were affected by artifacts. Data loss was higher when using data streaming (up to 49% among inpatient cohorts, averaged across respective recordings) as compared to onboard device recording and storage (up to 9%). On-body scores, estimating the percentage of time a device was worn on the body, were consistently high across cohorts (more than 80%). Signal quality of some modalities, based on established indices, was higher at night than during the day. A uniformly reported data quality and multimodal signal quality index is feasible, makes study results more comparable, and contributes to the development of devices and evaluation routines necessary for seizure monitoring.

Funder

Innovative Medicines Initiative

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Epilepsy Foundation

Mayo Clinic

Epilepsy Research UK

National Institutes of Health

National Science Foundation

Epilepsy Research Fund

Universitätsklinikum Freiburg

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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