Attractor-Vascular Coupling Theory: Formal Grounding and Empirical Validation for AAMI-Standard Cuffless Blood Pressure Estimation from Smartphone Photoplethysmography
Timothy Oladunni, Farouk Ganiyu Adewumi

TL;DR
This paper introduces the Attractor-Vascular Coupling Theory (AVCT), a mathematical framework validated through empirical data, enabling accurate cuffless blood pressure estimation from smartphone PPG signals using attractor features.
Contribution
The work formalizes AVCT, providing theoretical justification and demonstrating that smartphone PPG can reliably estimate blood pressure within clinical standards.
Findings
Achieved MAE of 2.05 mmHg for systolic BP and 1.67 mmHg for diastolic BP.
Model satisfied AAMI/IEEE SP10 requirements with high correlation coefficients.
Smartphone-only PPG features matched ECG+PPG model performance, enabling clinical-grade BP tracking.
Abstract
This work proposes Attractor-Vascular Coupling Theory (AVCT), a mathematical framework showing that cardiac attractor geometry encodes blood pressure (BP) information sufficient for AAMI-standard estimation, and validates the theory through a calibrated cuffless BP model using photoplethysmography (PPG). AVCT is grounded in Cardiac Stability Theory and operationalized using Takens delay embedding and attractor morphology extraction. Two theorems, one proposition, and one corollary formally justify the use of PPG attractor features for BP estimation and predict the feature-importance hierarchy. A LightGBM model trained on pulse transit time (PTT) and Cardiac Stability Index (CSI) attractor features under single-point calibration was evaluated using strict leave-one-subject-out cross-validation (LOSO-CV) on 46 subjects from BIDMC ICU (n = 9) and VitalDB surgical data (n = 37), comprising…
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