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Correlation integral and frequency analysis of cardiovascular functions

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Correlation integral and frequency analysis of cardiovascular functions. / Stefanovska, Aneta; Krošelj, Peter.
In: Open Systems and Information Dynamics, Vol. 4, No. 4, 01.11.1997, p. 457-478.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Stefanovska, A & Krošelj, P 1997, 'Correlation integral and frequency analysis of cardiovascular functions', Open Systems and Information Dynamics, vol. 4, no. 4, pp. 457-478. https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1009681002818

APA

Vancouver

Stefanovska A, Krošelj P. Correlation integral and frequency analysis of cardiovascular functions. Open Systems and Information Dynamics. 1997 Nov 1;4(4):457-478. doi: 10.1023/A:1009681002818

Author

Stefanovska, Aneta ; Krošelj, Peter. / Correlation integral and frequency analysis of cardiovascular functions. In: Open Systems and Information Dynamics. 1997 ; Vol. 4, No. 4. pp. 457-478.

Bibtex

@article{c770f37e17214f0eb12b68284fdedede,
title = "Correlation integral and frequency analysis of cardiovascular functions",
abstract = "To study the dynamics of the cardiovascular system several cardiovascular functions are measured at different sites of the human body. Measured time series of peripheral blood flow, respiration, electrical activity of the heart (ECG), and instantaneous heart rate (IHR) derived from the ECG are analysed in time and frequency domains and in phase space. Correlation integrals are calculated for the original signals and their surrogates. The auto and crosscorrelation functions and the Fourier spectra are also presented. All measured data of the physiological origin are corrupted by noise. To some extent they also contain non-stationarities. Therefore, the correlation integral is first analysed on numerically generated quasi-periodic time series and the effect of added noise is studied. The scale that is corrupted by noise is also analytically examined. An upper dimension which may reliably be estimated is evaluated. The results presented suggest that the calculated correlation integral cannot be used as a quantitative characterization of an attractor reconstructed from measured time series. Hence, only the relative qualitative differences between slopes of the correlation integral of measured time series and their surrogates are analysed. For all measured time series the slopes of their correlation integrals differ from those of their surrogates suggesting deterministic nature of the system that governs cardiovascular dynamics. It is also shown that all time series contain the same five characteristic peaks in their frequency spectra.",
author = "Aneta Stefanovska and Peter Kro{\v s}elj",
year = "1997",
month = nov,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1023/A:1009681002818",
language = "English",
volume = "4",
pages = "457--478",
journal = "Open Systems and Information Dynamics",
issn = "1230-1612",
publisher = "World Scientific Publishing Co. Pte Ltd",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Correlation integral and frequency analysis of cardiovascular functions

AU - Stefanovska, Aneta

AU - Krošelj, Peter

PY - 1997/11/1

Y1 - 1997/11/1

N2 - To study the dynamics of the cardiovascular system several cardiovascular functions are measured at different sites of the human body. Measured time series of peripheral blood flow, respiration, electrical activity of the heart (ECG), and instantaneous heart rate (IHR) derived from the ECG are analysed in time and frequency domains and in phase space. Correlation integrals are calculated for the original signals and their surrogates. The auto and crosscorrelation functions and the Fourier spectra are also presented. All measured data of the physiological origin are corrupted by noise. To some extent they also contain non-stationarities. Therefore, the correlation integral is first analysed on numerically generated quasi-periodic time series and the effect of added noise is studied. The scale that is corrupted by noise is also analytically examined. An upper dimension which may reliably be estimated is evaluated. The results presented suggest that the calculated correlation integral cannot be used as a quantitative characterization of an attractor reconstructed from measured time series. Hence, only the relative qualitative differences between slopes of the correlation integral of measured time series and their surrogates are analysed. For all measured time series the slopes of their correlation integrals differ from those of their surrogates suggesting deterministic nature of the system that governs cardiovascular dynamics. It is also shown that all time series contain the same five characteristic peaks in their frequency spectra.

AB - To study the dynamics of the cardiovascular system several cardiovascular functions are measured at different sites of the human body. Measured time series of peripheral blood flow, respiration, electrical activity of the heart (ECG), and instantaneous heart rate (IHR) derived from the ECG are analysed in time and frequency domains and in phase space. Correlation integrals are calculated for the original signals and their surrogates. The auto and crosscorrelation functions and the Fourier spectra are also presented. All measured data of the physiological origin are corrupted by noise. To some extent they also contain non-stationarities. Therefore, the correlation integral is first analysed on numerically generated quasi-periodic time series and the effect of added noise is studied. The scale that is corrupted by noise is also analytically examined. An upper dimension which may reliably be estimated is evaluated. The results presented suggest that the calculated correlation integral cannot be used as a quantitative characterization of an attractor reconstructed from measured time series. Hence, only the relative qualitative differences between slopes of the correlation integral of measured time series and their surrogates are analysed. For all measured time series the slopes of their correlation integrals differ from those of their surrogates suggesting deterministic nature of the system that governs cardiovascular dynamics. It is also shown that all time series contain the same five characteristic peaks in their frequency spectra.

U2 - 10.1023/A:1009681002818

DO - 10.1023/A:1009681002818

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:3042993951

VL - 4

SP - 457

EP - 478

JO - Open Systems and Information Dynamics

JF - Open Systems and Information Dynamics

SN - 1230-1612

IS - 4

ER -