The Hypno-PC: Uncovering Sleep Dynamics Through Principal Component Analysis and Hidden Markov Modelling of Electrophysiological Signals
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The conventional approach to sleep analysis relies on pre-defined, visually scored stages derived from electrophysiological signals. This manual method demands substantial effort and is influenced by subjective assessments, implicitly assuming that these categories accurately reflect underlying biological processes. Recent advancements indicate that low-dimensional representations of complex brain activity can provide objective means of identifying brain states. These approaches can potentially uncover inherent patterns within sleep, offering valuable insights into its organization. In this study, we applied Principal Component Analysis (PCA) to spectral features extracted from high-density EEG, EOG, EMG, and ECG recorded overnight at both 30– and 4-second resolutions. Notably, the first principal component—the “Hypno-PC”—strongly aligns with the hypnogram at both time scales. Subsequently, we employed a Gaussian Hidden Markov Model (GHMM) to delineate discrete states in the PCA-transformed data and to quantify their temporal dynamics. Using minimal supervision (less than 0.5% of the data labeled) and a cross-subject approach, the model achieved alignment with standard sleep labels comparable to the typical inter-rater agreement. Finally, independent component analysis (ICA) was applied to the PCA space, decomposing it into an independent set of components that potentially represent distinct physiological processes. The integrated use of PCA, GHMM, and ICA provides a reproducible and scalable methodology that aligns with traditional sleep staging, while offering a more flexible and comprehensive perspective on sleep states. Our findings indicate that these data-driven, unsupervised methods effectively uncover the intrinsic dynamics of sleep, advancing automated sleep analysis and enhancing our understanding of sleep organization.