| Literature DB >> 11541831 |
G M Viswanathan1, C K Peng, H E Stanley, A L Goldberger.
Abstract
A classic problem in physics is the analysis of highly nonstationary time series that typically exhibit long-range correlations. Here we test the hypothesis that the scaling properties of the dynamics of healthy physiological systems are more stable than those of pathological systems by studying beat-to-beat fluctuations in the human heart rate. We develop techniques based on the Fano factor and Allan factor functions, as well as on detrended fluctuation analysis, for quantifying deviations from uniform power-law scaling in nonstationary time series. By analyzing extremely long data sets of up to N = 10(5) beats for 11 healthy subjects, we find that the fluctuations in the heart rate scale approximately uniformly over several temporal orders of magnitude. By contrast, we find that in data sets of comparable length for 14 subjects with heart disease, the fluctuations grow erratically, indicating a loss of scaling stability.Entities:
Keywords: NASA Discipline Cardiopulmonary; Non-NASA Center
Mesh:
Year: 1997 PMID: 11541831 DOI: 10.1103/physreve.55.845
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Phys Rev E Stat Phys Plasmas Fluids Relat Interdiscip Topics ISSN: 1063-651X