DocumentCode
1543517
Title
Distortion properties of the interval spectrum of IPFM generated heartbeats for heart rate variability analysis
Author
Brennan, Michael ; Palaniswami, Marimuthu ; Kamen, Peter
Author_Institution
Dept. of Electr. & Electron. Eng., Melbourne Univ., Parkville, Vic., Australia
Volume
48
Issue
11
fYear
2001
Firstpage
1251
Lastpage
1264
Abstract
The integral pulse frequency modulation (IPFM) model converts a continuous-time signal into a modulated series of event times, often represented as a pulse train. The IPFM process is important to the field of heart rate variability (HRV) as a simple model of the sinus modulation of heart rate. Here, the authors discuss the distortion properties associated with employing the interval spectrum for the recovery of the input signal from an IPFM process\´s output pulse train. The results state, in particular for HRV, how precisely the interval spectrum can be used to infer the modulation signal responsible for a series of heartbeats. The authors have developed a detailed analytical approximation of the interval spectrum of an IPFM process with multiple sinusoids as the input signal. Employing this result, they describe the structure and the distortion of the interval spectrum. The distortion properties of the interval spectrum are investigated systematically for a pair of frequency components. The effects of linear and nonlinear distortion of the fundamentals, the overall contribution of harmonic components to the total power, the relative contribution of "folded back" power due to aliasing and the total distortion of the input spectrum are investigated. The authors also provide detailed comparisons between the interval spectrum and the spectrum of counts (SOC). The spectral distortion is significant enough that caution should be taken when interpreting the interval spectrum, especially for high frequencies or large modulation amplitudes. Nevertheless, the distortion levels are not significantly larger than those of the SOC. Therefore, the spectrum of intervals may be considered a viable technique that suffers more distortion than the SOC.
Keywords
electrocardiography; harmonics; medical signal processing; physiological models; pulse frequency modulation; spectral analysis; aliasing; detailed analytical approximation; frequency components pair; harmonic components; heart rate variability; input signal; input signal recovery; interval spectrum distortion properties; linear distortion; multiple sinusoids; nonlinear distortion; sinus modulation; spectrum of counts; Distortion; Frequency modulation; Heart rate; Heart rate variability; Pulse generation; Pulse modulation; Signal analysis; Signal generators; Signal processing; Time series analysis; Analysis of Variance; Biomedical Engineering; Computer Simulation; Heart Rate; Humans; Models, Cardiovascular; Nonlinear Dynamics;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Biomedical Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9294
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/10.959321
Filename
959321
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