254 research outputs found
Improving time–frequency domain sleep EEG classification via singular spectrum analysis
Background: Manual sleep scoring is deemed to be tedious and time consuming. Even among automatic methods such as Time-Frequency (T-F) representations, there is still room for more improvement.
New method: To optimise the efficiency of T-F domain analysis of sleep electroencephalography (EEG) a novel approach for automatically identifying the brain waves, sleep spindles, and K-complexes from the sleep EEG signals is proposed. The proposed method is based on singular spectrum analysis (SSA). The single-channel EEG signal (C3-A2) is initially decomposed and then the desired components are automatically separated. In addition, the noise is removed to enhance the discrimination ability of features. The obtained T-F features after preprocessing stage are classified using a multi-class support vector machines (SVM) and used for the identification of four sleep stages over three sleep types. Furthermore, to emphasize on the usefulness of the proposed method the automatically-determined spindles are parameterised to discriminate three sleep types.
Result: The four sleep stages are classified through SVM twice: with and without preprocessing stage. The mean accuracy, sensitivity, and specificity for before the preprocessing stage are: 71.5 ± 0.11%, 56.1 ± 0.09% and 86.8 ± 0.04% respectively. However, these values increase significantly to 83.6 ± 0.07%, 70.6 ± 0.14% and 90.8 ± 0.03% after applying SSA.
Comparison with existing method: The new T-F representation has been compared with the existing benchmarks. Our results prove that, the proposed method well outperforms the previous methods in terms of identification and representation of sleep stages.
Conclusion: Experimental results confirm the performance improvement in terms of classification rate and also representative T-F domain
Reasons for and consequences of missed appointments in general practice in the UK: questionnaire survey and prospective review of medical records
Background
Missed appointments are a common occurrence in primary care in the UK, yet little is known about the reasons for them, or the consequences of missing an appointment. This paper aims to determine the reasons for missed appointments and whether patients who miss an appointment subsequently consult their general practitioner (GP). Secondary aims are to compare psychological morbidity, and the previous appointments with GPs between subjects and a comparison group.
Methods
Postal questionnaire survey and prospective medical notes review of adult patients missing an appointment and the comparison group who attended appointments over a three week period in seven general practices in West Yorkshire.
Results
Of the 386 who missed appointments 122 (32%) responded. Of the 386 in the comparison group 223 (58%) responded, resulting in 23 case-control matched pairs with complete data collection. Over 40% of individuals who missed an appointment and participated said that they forgot the appointment and a quarter said that they tried very hard to cancel the appointment or that it was at an inconvenient time. A fifth reported family commitments or being too ill to attend. Over 90% of the patients who missed an appointment subsequently consulted within three months and of these nearly 60% consulted for the stated problem that was going to be presented in the missed consultation. The odds of missing an appointment decreased with increasing age and were greater among those who had missed at least one appointment in the previous 12 months. However, estimates for comparisons between those who missed appointments and the comparison group were imprecise due to the low response rate.
Conclusion
Patients who miss appointments tend to cite practice factors and their own forgetfulness as the main reasons for doing so, and most attend within three months of a missed appointment. This study highlights a number of implications for future research. More work needs to be done to engage people who miss appointments into research in a meaningful way
Stiffness Control of Surgical Continuum Manipulators
This paper introduces the first stiffness controller for continuum robots. The control law is based on an accurate approximation of a continuum robot’s coupled kinematic and static force model. To implement a desired tip stiffness, the controller drives the actuators to positions corresponding to a deflected robot configuration that produces the required tip force for the measured tip position. This approach provides several important advantages. First, it enables the use of robot deflection sensing as a means to both sense and control tip forces. Second, it enables stiffness control to be implemented by modification of existing continuum robot position controllers. The proposed controller is demonstrated experimentally in the context of a concentric tube robot. Results show that the stiffness controller achieves the desired stiffness in steady state, provides good dynamic performance, and exhibits stability during contact transitions
Large naturally-produced electric currents and voltage traverse damaged mammalian spinal cord
Serum uric acid and coronary artery disease risk: a 10-year prospective cohort study in healthy adults.
The role of serum uric acid (SUA) as an independent risk factor for coronary artery disease (CAD) remains controversial, particularly in understudied Middle Eastern populations with distinct metabolic and dietary profiles.
To investigate the association between SUA levels and 10-year CAD incidence in a healthy Iranian cohort, adjusting for cardiometabolic confounders and exploring sex-specific relationships.
A 10-year prospective cohort study was conducted using data from the Yazd Healthy Heart Project. Cluster-random sampling recruited adults aged 20-74 years free of baseline cardiovascular disease. Participants with existing coronary artery disease, insufficient data, or loss to follow-up were excluded. Serum uric acid levels were stratified into quartiles, and Cox proportional hazards models adjusted for demographic, lifestyle, and metabolic variables were analyzed using SPSS (version 27.0).
Over 15,420 person-years, 225 incident CAD cases occurred (14.5% cumulative incidence). In crude analysis, the highest SUA quartile (Q4: > 5.2 mg/dL) was associated with increased CAD risk (HR = 1.66, 95% CI: 1.14-2.43). However, this association attenuated after adjustment for confounders (fully adjusted HR = 1.03, 95% CI: 0.62-1.69). Sex-stratified analysis revealed a transient association in women (crude HR = 2.13, 95% CI: 1.14-3.96), which dissipated post-adjustment, while no significant association was observed in men.
Elevated SUA levels were not independently associated with CAD risk in this healthy Middle Eastern cohort. Initial associations were attributable to confounding by metabolic factors such as obesity, dyslipidemia, and hypertension. These findings underscore the importance of contextualizing SUA's role within population-specific risk profiles and highlight the need for nuanced risk stratification strategies
Large magnetoresistance by Pauli blockade in hydrogenated graphene
We report the observation of a giant positive magnetoresistance in millimetre
scale hydrogenated graphene with magnetic field oriented in the plane of the
graphene sheet. A positive magnetoresistance in excess of 200\% at a
temperature of 300 mK was observed in this configuration, reverting to negative
magnetoresistance with the magnetic field oriented normal to the graphene
plane. We attribute the observed positive, in-plane, magnetoresistance to
Pauli-blockade of hopping conduction induced by spin polarization. Our work
shows that spin polarization in concert with electron-electron interaction can
play a dominant role in magnetotransport within an atomic monolayer.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, and supplemental informatio
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