PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Mount Sinai-led team enhances automated method to detect common sleep disorder affecting millions

2025-01-09
(Press-News.org) A Mount Sinai-led team of researchers has enhanced an artificial intelligence (AI)-powered algorithm to analyze video recordings of clinical sleep tests, ultimately improving accurate diagnosis of a common sleep disorder affecting more than 80 million people worldwide. The study findings were published in the journal Annals of Neurology on January 9.

REM sleep behavior disorder (RBD) is a sleep condition that causes abnormal movements, or the physical acting out of dreams, during the rapid eye movement (REM) phase of sleep. RBD that occurs in otherwise healthy adults is called “isolated” RBD. It affects more than one million people in the United States and, in nearly all cases, is an early sign of Parkinson’s disease or dementia.

RBD is extremely difficult to diagnose because its symptoms can go unnoticed or be confused with other diseases. A definitive diagnosis requires a sleep study, known as a video-polysomnogram, to be conducted by a medical professional at a facility with sleep-monitoring technology. The data are also subjective and can be difficult to universally interpret based on multiple and complex variables including sleep stages and amount of muscle activity. Although video data is systematically recorded during a sleep test, it is rarely reviewed and is often discarded after the test has been interpreted.

Previous limited work in this area had suggested that research-grade 3D cameras may be needed to detect movements during sleep because sheets or blankets would cover the activity. This study is the first to outline the development of an automated machine learning method that analyzes video recordings routinely collected with a 2D camera during overnight sleep tests. This method also defines additional “classifiers” or features of movements, yielding an accuracy rate for detecting RBD of nearly 92 percent.

“This automated approach could be integrated into clinical workflow during the interpretation of sleep tests to enhance and facilitate diagnosis, and avoid missed diagnoses,” said corresponding author Emmanuel During, MD, Associate Professor of Neurology (Movement Disorders), and Medicine (Pulmonary, Critical Care and Sleep Medicine), at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai. “This method could also be used to inform treatment decisions based on the severity of movements displayed during the sleep tests and, ultimately, help doctors personalize care plans for individual patients.”

The Mount Sinai team replicated and expanded a proposal for an automated machine learning analysis of movements during sleep studies that was created by researchers at the Medical University of Innsbruck in Austria. This approach uses computer vision, a field of artificial intelligence that allows computers to analyze and understand visual data including images and videos. Building on this framework, Mount Sinai experts used 2D cameras, which are routinely found in clinical sleep labs, to monitor patient slumber overnight. The dataset included analysis of recordings at a sleep center of about 80 RBD patients and a control group of about 90 patients without RBD who had either another sleep disorder or no sleep disruption. An automated algorithm that calculated the motion of pixels between consecutive frames in a video was able to detect movements during REM sleep. The experts reviewed the data to extract the rate, ratio, magnitude, and velocity of movements, and ratio of immobility. They analyzed these five features of short movements to achieve the highest accuracy to date by researchers, at 92 percent.

Researchers from the Swiss Federal Technology Institute of Lausanne (École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne) in Lausanne, Switzerland contributed to the study by sharing their expertise in computer vision.

 

About the Mount Sinai Health System

Mount Sinai Health System is one of the largest academic medical systems in the New York metro area, with 48,000 employees working across eight hospitals, more than 400 outpatient practices, more than 600 research and clinical labs, a school of nursing, and a leading school of medicine and graduate education. Mount Sinai advances health for all people, everywhere, by taking on the most complex health care challenges of our time—discovering and applying new scientific learning and knowledge; developing safer, more effective treatments; educating the next generation of medical leaders and innovators; and supporting local communities by delivering high-quality care to all who need it.

Through the integration of its hospitals, labs, and schools, Mount Sinai offers comprehensive health care solutions from birth through geriatrics, leveraging innovative approaches such as artificial intelligence and informatics while keeping patients’ medical and emotional needs at the center of all treatment. The Health System includes approximately 9,000 primary and specialty care physicians and 11 free-standing joint-venture centers throughout the five boroughs of New York City, Westchester, Long Island, and Florida. Hospitals within the System are consistently ranked by Newsweek’s® “The World’s Best Smart Hospitals, Best in State Hospitals, World Best Hospitals and Best Specialty Hospitals” and by U.S. News & World Report’s® “Best Hospitals” and “Best Children’s Hospitals.” The Mount Sinai Hospital is on the U.S. News & World Report® “Best Hospitals” Honor Roll for 2024-2025.

For more information, visit https://www.mountsinai.org or find Mount Sinai on Facebook, Twitter and YouTube.

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Dr. Ruth Westheimer, Dr. Helen Fisher, and Dr. Judith Allen donate historic archives to the Kinsey Institute

Dr. Ruth Westheimer, Dr. Helen Fisher, and Dr. Judith Allen donate historic archives to the Kinsey Institute
2025-01-09
The Kinsey Institute at Indiana University has acquired remarkable archives from three pioneering figures in the study of human sexuality, relationships, and wellbeing: the legendary sex therapist Dr. Ruth Westheimer, renowned anthropologist Dr. Helen Fisher, and respected feminist historian Dr. Judith Allen. These invaluable collections represent decades of groundbreaking research, education, and cultural contributions that will advance future scholarship and research.   “For almost 80 ...

Bridging oceans: A US-Japan approach to flood risk and climate resilience

Bridging oceans: A US-Japan approach to flood risk and climate resilience
2025-01-09
An innovative project jointly funded by the United States National Science Foundation (NSF) and the Japan Science and Technology Agency (JST) brings together a team of scientists from Florida Atlantic University and Lehigh University, along with a team from Japan that includes researchers from Kyoto University, University of Tokyo and Kumamoto University. The project, titled “NSF-JST: An Inclusive Human-Centered Risk Management Modeling Framework for Flood Resilience,” is supported by a three-year, $1 million award split evenly between the U.S. and Japanese teams, with the U.S. team receiving $499,271. ...

Dense human population is linked to longer urban coyote survival

2025-01-09
COLUMBUS, Ohio – Tracking coyote movement in metropolitan areas shows the animals spend lots of time in natural settings, but a new study suggests the human element of city life has a bigger impact than the environment on urban coyote survival. Researchers monitoring coyotes in Chicago found that habitat – areas with relatively high levels of vegetation cover and low levels of human infrastructure – did not influence coyote survival in positive or negative ways. Instead, areas densely populated with humans were ...

Science educator calls for climate change to be taught more in US schools

2025-01-09
Given that today’s children will inherit the consequences of climate change, schools are instrumental in mobilizing a global response to the climate crisis, a science educator argues. Climate literacy advocate Kelley T. Lê argues that climate change is the defining issue of our time, and in her new book, Teaching Climate Change for Grades 6–12: Activating Science Teachers to Take on the Climate Crisis Through NGSS, Lê provides teachers, administrators, and global leaders with practical tools to empower ...

Realistic emission tests for motorbikes, mopeds and quads

Realistic emission tests for motorbikes, mopeds and quads
2025-01-09
The emissions scandal in the automotive industry that came to light in 2015 has set many things in motion. Last but not least, the discussion about the need for realistic tests for vehicles in order to correctly determine their pollutant emissions instead of just testing on test rigs. Such tests and the applicable emission limits are now required by law for cars, but not for so-called category-L vehicles (mopeds, motorbikes, tricycles and quads). As part of the “LENS” project (L-vehicles Emissions and Noise mitigation Solutions) funded by the European ...

Race- and gender-based microaggressions linked to higher post-birth blood pressure

2025-01-09
Research Highlights: More than one-third of Asian, Black and Hispanic women in the study group reported  experiencing at least one microaggression related to race and gender during or after their pregnancy. The link between racial microaggressions and postpartum blood pressure was strongest 10 or more days after delivery, when the blood pressure may be monitored less often, the researchers noted. The researchers also noted that these types of gendered racial microaggressions can raise blood pressure postpartum and suggest blood pressure monitoring and/or treatment for high blood pressure may need to ...

Novel ‘quantum refrigerator’ is great at erasing quantum computer’s chalkboard

Novel ‘quantum refrigerator’ is great at erasing quantum computer’s chalkboard
2025-01-09
If you’d like to solve a math problem on a good old-fashioned chalkboard, you want the board clean and free of any previous markings so that you have space to work. Quantum computers have a similar need for a clean workspace, and a team including scientists at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) has found an innovative and effective way to create and maintain it.  The research effort, a collaboration with physicists at Sweden’s Chalmers University of Technology, could address one of the main issues confronting quantum computer designers: ...

States struggle to curb food waste despite policies

States struggle to curb food waste despite policies
2025-01-09
The United States generates more food waste than all but two countries. To address this, the federal government set a goal to cut food waste in half by 2030 compared to 2016 levels, to about 164 pounds per person annually. But a new study published in Nature Food and led by University of California, Davis, reveals that current state policies are falling short. Since 2016, per capita food waste has increased instead of decreasing.  “We’re just five years away from 2030 so it’s quite alarming how ...

Record cold quantum refrigerator paves way for reliable quantum computers

Record cold quantum refrigerator paves way for reliable quantum computers
2025-01-09
Quantum computers require extreme cooling to perform reliable calculations. One of the challenges preventing quantum computers from entering society is the difficulty of freezing the qubits to temperatures close to absolute zero. Now, researchers at Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden, and the University of Maryland, USA, have engineered a new type of refrigerator that can autonomously cool superconducting qubits to record low temperatures, paving the way for more reliable quantum computation. Quantum computers have the potential to revolutionise fundamental technologies in various sectors of society, with applications in medicine, energy, encryption, AI, and logistics. While the building ...

New discovery makes organic solar cells more efficient and stable

2025-01-09
EMBARGO 9.1.2025 New discovery makes organic solar cells more efficient and stable Researchers at Åbo Akademi University in Finland have identified and eliminated a previously unknown loss mechanism in organic solar cells that makes them more efficient and gives them a longer lifetime. The results provide new insight into how efficiency and stability can be increased in the future. The work of the Organic Electronics Research Group at Åbo Akademi University was carried out in cooperation with Professor Chang-Qi Ma's group at Suzhou Institute ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

New study from Chapman University reveals rapid return of water from ground to atmosphere through plants

World's darkest and clearest skies at risk from industrial megaproject

UC Irvine-led discovery of new skeletal tissue advances regenerative medicine potential

Pulse oximeters infrequently tested by manufacturers on diverse sets of subjects

Press Registration is open for the 2025 AAN Annual Meeting

New book connects eugenics to Big Tech

Electrifying your workout can boost muscles mass, strength, UTEP study finds

Renewed grant will continue UTIA’s integrated pest management program

Researchers find betrayal doesn’t necessarily make someone less trustworthy if we benefit

Pet dogs often overlooked as spreader of antimicrobial-resistant Salmonella

Pioneering new tool will spur advances in catalysis

Physical neglect as damaging to children’s social development as abuse

Earth scientist awarded National Medal of Science, highest honor US bestows on scientists

Research Spotlight: Lipid nanoparticle therapy developed to stop tumor growth and restore tumor suppression

Don’t write off logged tropical forests – converting to oil palm plantations has even wider effects on ecosystems

Chimpanzees are genetically adapted to local habitats and infections such as malaria

Changes to building materials could store carbon dioxide for decades

EPA finalized rule on greenhouse gas emissions by power plants could reduce emissions with limited costs

Kangaroos kept a broad diet through late Pleistocene climate changes

Sex-specific neural circuits underlie shifting social preferences for male or female interaction among mice

The basis of voluntary movements: A groundbreaking study in ‘Science’ reveals the brain mechanisms controlling natural actions

Storing carbon in buildings could help address climate change

May the force not be with you: Cell migration doesn't only rely on generating force

NTU Singapore-led discovery poised to help detect dark matter and pave the way to unravel the universe’s secrets

Researchers use lab data to rewrite equation for deformation, flow of watery glacier ice

Did prehistoric kangaroos run out of food?

HKU Engineering Professor Kaibin Huang named Fellow of the US National Academy of Inventors

HKU Faculty of Arts Professor Charles Schencking elected as Corresponding Fellow of the Australian Academy of Humanities

Rise in post-birth blood pressure in Asian, Black, and Hispanic women linked to microaggressions

Weight changes and heart failure risk after breast cancer development

[Press-News.org] Mount Sinai-led team enhances automated method to detect common sleep disorder affecting millions