The purpose of this work was to describe the basic statistical properties of the process of production of movements measured with a wrist actimeter, along a complete sleep period in normal human subjects. Two distinct types of random magnitudes were considered to analyze the data, the times between successive groups of movements and the number of movements at each fixed time (1 min) measurement epoch. Suitable probabilistic models for the two variates were chosen, fitting theoretical distribution functions to the observed data. It is concluded that interval data fit a one-parameter exponential distribution, while the number of movements fit a two-parameter negative binomial distribution. The estimated values of these parameters, besides being necessary to perform further statistical analysis, are a measure of the intensity and frequency of the movements. Finally the relationship between polysomnography measures and the elicited parameters was studied.

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