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Errors in sleep classification generated using AI could lead to misdiagnosis of child sleep disorders

child sleep
Credit: Unsplash/CC0 Public Domain

A dearth of pediatric data collected using artificial intelligence (AI) tools could compromise the understanding of early sleep patterns.

"Sleep stages are primarily determined by analyzing the during sleep, which traditionally is done manually (or semi-automated)," said the University of Adelaide's Associate Professor Mathias Baumert, School of Electrical and Mechanical Engineering.

"There has been a big push to automate this labor-intensive and expensive process using —an AI method that teaches computers to process data in a way that is inspired by the .

"We have found evidence that errors in sleep classification generated using AI could lead to misdiagnosis of sleep disorders, particularly in children."

Nerve impulses in the brain cause electrical activity. An electroencephalogram (EEG) records the brain's electrical activity on a person's scalp. Collected overnight, it provides the input data to deep learning systems.

"Deep learning systems need big EEG databases to learn the brain wave patterns associated with various sleep stages to give reliable results," said Associate Professor Baumert.

"However, most available sleep EEG databases contain adult data only and therefore, the systems developed on those databases seem to have issues when dealing with kids' sleep because they have never 'seen' and 'learnt' it. This means sleep disorders in children could be misdiagnosed due to using adult-biased data sets."

The study was published in the journal Sleep Medicine .

The association between sleep problems, and has long been studied and recognized. Early identification of sleep problems, especially in , is vital to maximizing the effectiveness of appropriate treatment.

Generally, sleep comprises rapid eye movement (REM) sleep and non- (NREM) sleep. NREM is categorized into three stages (N1, N2, N3). Prior to the introduction of AI methods for classifying sleep patterns, a technician would examine overnight EEG, 30 seconds at a time, and assign one of the sleep stages to it.

"Sleep follows a typical cyclical pattern of sleep stages that make up the 'sleep architecture' and can be seen in a hypnogram—a graph that represents the stages of sleep over time," said Associate Professor Baumert.

"Clinicians consider several metrics from hypnograms, such as sleep onset latency, sleep efficiency, time spent in each of the sleep stages, and time spent awake after sleep onset, to help them diagnose ."

On adult EEG, AI systems assign sleep stages correctly about nine out of ten times—on par with human experts. A similar performance can be achieved for children if pediatric data are included in the deep learning process.

Dr. Huy Phan, Alan Turing Institute, U.K., who was co-author of the study said improvements are needed in AI systems to avoid bias towards population groups and ensure accurate diagnoses for all patients.

"Even if trained with pediatric data, current AI systems don't work equally well in all patients. While sleep stage classification accuracy appears sufficient when looking at EEG databases as a whole, errors in the metrics of individual patients can be substantial, which is unacceptable for any diagnostic purpose."

"Effective strategies are needed to avoid bias in the learning process and also to identify unusual behavior of AI systems and mitigate the risk of misdiagnoses."

More information: Mathias Baumert et al, Automatic sleep staging for the young and the old—Evaluating age bias in deep learning, Sleep Medicine (2023). DOI: 10.1016/j.sleep.2023.04.002

Journal information: Sleep Medicine
Citation: Errors in sleep classification generated using AI could lead to misdiagnosis of child sleep disorders (2023, April 26) retrieved 25 June 2024 from https://medicalxpress.com/news/2023-04-errors-classification-generated-ai-misdiagnosis.html
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