Litcius/Paper detail

Certainty about uncertainty in sleep staging: a theoretical framework

Hans van Gorp, Iris A. M. Huijben, Pedro Fonseca, Ruud J. G. van Sloun, Sebastiaan Overeem, Merel M. van Gilst

2022SLEEP32 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Sleep stage classification is an important tool for the diagnosis of sleep disorders. Because sleep staging has such a high impact on clinical outcome, it is important that it is done reliably. However, it is known that uncertainty exists in both expert scorers and automated models. On average, the agreement between human scorers is only 82.6%. In this study, we provide a theoretical framework to facilitate discussion and further analyses of uncertainty in sleep staging. To this end, we introduce two variants of uncertainty, known from statistics and the machine learning community: aleatoric and epistemic uncertainty. We discuss what these types of uncertainties are, why the distinction is useful, where they arise from in sleep staging, and provide recommendations on how this framework can improve sleep staging in the future.

Topics & Concepts

CertaintySleep (system call)Sleep StagesOutcome (game theory)PsychologyComputer scienceCognitive psychologyArtificial intelligencePolysomnographyElectroencephalographyPsychiatryEpistemologyMathematicsPhilosophyOperating systemMathematical economicsSleep and Wakefulness ResearchSleep and Work-Related FatigueSleep and related disorders