In a time-series, memory is a statistical feature that lasts for a period of time and distinguishes the time-series from a random, or memory-less, process. In the present study, the concept of “memory length” was used to define the time period, or scale over which rare events within a physiological time-series do not appear randomly. The method is based on inverse statistical analysis and provides empiric evidence that rare fluctuations in cardio-respiratory time-series are ‘forgotten’ quickly in healthy subjects while the memory for such events is significantly prolonged in pathological conditions such as asthma (respiratory time-series) and liver cirrhosis (heart-beat time-series). The memory length was significantly higher in patients with uncontrolled asthma compared to healthy volunteers. Likewise, it was significantly higher in patients with decompensated cirrhosis compared to those with compensated cirrhosis and healthy volunteers. We also observed that the cardio-respiratory system has simple low order dynamics and short memory around its average, and high order dynamics around rare fluctuations.
We present an investigation on heart cycle time series, using inverse statistical analysis, a
concept borrowed from studying turbulence. Using this approach, we studied the
distribution of the exit times needed to achieve a predefined level of heart rate alteration.
Such analysis uncovers the most likely waiting time needed to reach a certain change in the
rate of heart beat. This analysis showed a significant difference between the raw
data and shuffled data, when the heart rate accelerates or decelerates to a rare
event. We also report that inverse statistical analysis can distinguish between
the electrocardiograms taken from healthy volunteers and patients with heart
failure.
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