Publication detail
Method for cycle detection in sparse, irregularly sampled, long-term neuro-behavioral timeseries: Basis pursuit denoising with polynomial detrending of long-term, inter-ictal epileptiform activity
BALZEKAS, I. TRZASKO, J. YU, G. RICHNER, T. MÍVALT, F. SLADKÝ, V. GREGG, N. VAN GOMPEL, J. MILLER, K. CROARKIN, P. KŘEMEN, V. WORRELL, G.
Original Title
Method for cycle detection in sparse, irregularly sampled, long-term neuro-behavioral timeseries: Basis pursuit denoising with polynomial detrending of long-term, inter-ictal epileptiform activity
Type
journal article in Web of Science
Language
English
Original Abstract
Numerous physiological processes are cyclical, but sampling these processes densely enough to perform frequency decomposition and subsequent analyses can be challenging. Mathematical approaches for decomposition and reconstruction of sparsely and irregularly sampled signals are well established but have been under-utilized in physiological applications. We developed a basis pursuit denoising with polynomial detrending (BPWP) model that recovers oscillations and trends from sparse and irregularly sampled timeseries. We validated this model on a unique dataset of long-term inter-ictal epileptiform discharge (IED) rates from human hippocampus recorded with a novel investigational device with continuous local field potential sensing. IED rates have well established circadian and multiday cycles related to sleep, wakefulness, and seizure clusters. Given sparse and irregular samples of IED rates from multi-month intracranial EEG recordings from ambulatory humans, we used BPWP to compute narrowband spectral power and polynomial trend coefficients and identify IED rate cycles in three subjects. In select cases, we propose that random and irregular sampling may be leveraged for frequency decomposition of physiological signals.Trial Registration: NCT03946618. Circadian and multiday cycles are an important part of many long-term neuro-behavioral phenomena such as pathological inter-ictal epileptiform discharges (IEDs) and seizures in epilepsy. Long-term, ambulatory, neuro-behavioral monitoring in human patients involves complex recording systems that can be subject to intermittent, irregular data loss and storage limitations, resulting in sparse, irregularly sampled data. Cycle identification in sparse data or irregular data using traditional frequency decomposition techniques typically requires interpolation to create a regular timeseries. Using unique, long-term recordings of pathological brain activity in people with epilepsy implanted with an investigational device, we developed a method to identify cycles in sparse, irregular neuro-behavioral data without interpolation. We anticipate this approach will enable retrospective cycle identification in sparse neuro-behavioral timeseries and support prospective sparse sampling in monitoring systems to enable long-term monitoring of patients and to extend storage capacity in a variety of ambulatory monitoring applications.
Keywords
NONLINEAR LEAST-SQUARES; FREEDOM
Authors
BALZEKAS, I.; TRZASKO, J.; YU, G.; RICHNER, T.; MÍVALT, F.; SLADKÝ, V.; GREGG, N.; VAN GOMPEL, J.; MILLER, K.; CROARKIN, P.; KŘEMEN, V.; WORRELL, G.
Released
25. 4. 2024
Publisher
PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
Location
SAN FRANCISCO
ISBN
1553-7358
Periodical
PLoS Computational Biology
Year of study
20
Number
4
State
United States of America
Pages from
1
Pages to
25
Pages count
25
URL
Full text in the Digital Library
BibTex
@article{BUT197363,
author="Irena {Balzekas} and Joshua {Trzasko} and Grace {Yu} and Thomas {Richner} and Filip {Mívalt} and Vladimír {Sladký} and Nicholas M. {Gregg} and Jamie J. {Van Gompel} and Kai J. {Miller} and Paul E. {Croarkin} and Václav {Křemen} and Gregory {Worrell}",
title="Method for cycle detection in sparse, irregularly sampled, long-term neuro-behavioral timeseries: Basis pursuit denoising with polynomial detrending of long-term, inter-ictal epileptiform activity",
journal="PLoS Computational Biology",
year="2024",
volume="20",
number="4",
pages="1--25",
doi="10.1371/journal.pcbi.1011152",
issn="1553-7358",
url="https://journals.plos.org/ploscompbiol/article?id=10.1371/journal.pcbi.1011152"
}