We present a multi-objective optimization method for electroencephalographic (EEG) channel selection based on the non-dominated sorting genetic algorithm (NSGA) for epileptic-seizure classification. We tested the method on EEG data of 24 patients from the CHB-MIT public dataset. The procedure starts by decomposing the EEG data from each channel into different frequency bands using the empirical mode decomposition (EMD) or the discrete wavelet transform (DWT), and then for each sub-band four features are extracted; two energy values and two fractal dimension values. The obtained feature vectors are then iteratively tested for solving two unconstrained objectives by NSGA-II or NSGA-III; to maximize classification accuracy and to reduce the number of EEG channels required for epileptic seizure classification. Our results have shown accuracies of up to 1.00 with only one EEG channel. Interestingly, when using all the EEG channels available, lower accuracies were achieved compared to the case when EEG channels were selected by NSGA-II or NSGA-III; i.e., in patient 19 we obtained an accuracy of 0.95 using all the channels and 0.975 using only two channels selected by NSGA-III. The results obtained are encouraging and it has been shown that it is possible to classify epileptic seizures using a few electrodes, which provide evidence for the future development of portable EEG seizure detection devices.
We present a four-objective optimization method for optimal electroencephalographic (eeG) channel selection to provide access to subjects with permission in a system by detecting intruders and identifying the subject. Each instance was represented by four features computed from two subbands, extracted using empirical mode decomposition (eMD) for each channel, and the feature vectors were used as input for one-class/multi-class support vector machines (SVMs). We tested the method on data from the event-related potentials (ERPs) of 26 subjects and 56 channels. The optimization process was performed by the non-dominated sorting genetic algorithm (NSGA), which found a threechannel combination that achieved an accuracy of 0.83, with both a true acceptance rate (TAR) and a true rejection rate (TRR) of 1.00. In the best case, we obtained an accuracy of up to 0.98 for subject identification with a TAR of 0.95 and a TRR 0.93, all using seven EEG channels found by NSGA-III in a subset of subjects manually created. The findings were also validated using 10 different subdivisions of subjects randomly created, obtaining up to 0.97 ± 0.02 of accuracy, a TAR of 0.81 ± 0.12 and TRR of 0.85 ± 0.10 using eight channels found by NSGA-III. These results support further studies on larger datasets for potential applications of EEG in identification and authentication systems.
A new concept of low-density electroencephalograms-based (EEG) Subject identification is proposed in this paper. To that aim, EEG recordings of resting-states were analyzed with 3 different classifiers (SVM, k-NN, and naive Bayes) using Empirical Mode Decomposition (EMD) and Discrete Wavelet Transform (DWT) for feature extraction and their accuracies were estimated to compare their performances. To explore the feasibility of using fewer channels with minimum loss of accuracy, the methods were applied to a dataset of 27 Subjects (From 5 sessions of 30 instances per Subject) recorded using the EMOTIV EPOC device with 1 set of 14 channels and 4 subsets (8, 4, 2 and 1 channel) that were selected using a greedy algorithm. The experiments were reproduced using fewer instances each time to observe the evolution of the accuracy using both; fewer channels and fewer instances. The results of this experiments suggest that EMD compared with DWT is a more robust technique for feature extraction from brain signals to identify Subjects during resting-states, particularly when the amount of information is reduced: e.g., using Linear SVM and 30 instances per Subject, the accuracies obtained using 14 channels were 0.91 and 0.95, with 8 channels were 0.87 and 0.89 with EMD and DWT respectively but were reversed in favor of EMD when the number of channels was reduced to 4 channels (0.76 and 0.74), 2 (0.64 and 0.56) and 1 channel (0.46 and 0.31). The general observed trend is that, Linear SVM exhibits higher accuracy rates using high-density EEG (0.91 with 14 channels) while Gaussian naive Bayes exhibits better accuracies when using low-density EEG in comparison with the other classifiers (With EMD 0.88, 0.81, 0.76 and 0.61 respectively for 8, 4, 2 and 1 channel). The findings of these experiments reveal an important insight for continuing the exploration of low-density EEG for Subject identification.
When brain activity is translated into commands for real applications, the potential for human capacities augmentation is promising. In this paper, EMD is used to decompose EEG signals during Imagined Speech in order to use it as a biometric marker for creating a Biometric Recognition System. For each EEG channel, the most relevant Intrinsic Mode Functions (IMFs) are decided based on the Minkowski distance, and for each IMF 4 features are computed: Instantaneous and Teager energy distribution and Higuchi and Petrosian Fractal Dimension. To test the proposed method, a dataset with 20 subjects who imagined 30 repetitions of 5 words in Spanish, is used. Four classifiers are used for this task -random forest, SVM, naive Bayes and k-NN -and their performances are compared. The accuracy obtained (up to 0.92 using Linear SVM) after 10-folds cross-validation suggest that the proposed method based on EMD can be valuable for creating EEG-based biometrics of imagined speech for Subjects identification.
We present a new approach for a biometric system based on electroencephalographic (EEG) signals of resting-state, that can identify a subject and reject intruders with a minimal subset of EEG channels. To select features, we first use the discrete wavelet transform (DWT) or empirical mode decomposition (EMD) to decompose the EEG signals into a set of sub-bands, for which we compute the instantaneous and Teager energy and the Higuchi and Petrosian fractal dimensions for each sub-band. The obtained features are used as input for the local outlier factor (LOF) algorithm to create a model for each subject, with the aim of learning from it and rejecting instances not related to the subject in the model. In search of a minimal subset of EEG channels, we used a channel-selection method based on the non-dominated sorting genetic algorithm (NSGA)-III, designed with the objectives of minimizing the required number EEG channels and increasing the true acceptance rate (TAR) and true rejection rate (TRR). This method was tested on EEG signals from 109 subjects of the public motor movement/imagery dataset (EEGMMIDB) using the resting-state with the eyes-open and the resting-state with the eyes-closed. We were able to obtain a TAR of $$1.000 \pm 0.000$$ 1.000 ± 0.000 and TRR of $$0.998 \pm 0.001$$ 0.998 ± 0.001 using 64 EEG channels. More importantly, with only three channels, we were able to obtain a TAR of up to $$0.993 \pm 0.01$$ 0.993 ± 0.01 and a TRR of up to $$0.941 \pm 0.002$$ 0.941 ± 0.002 for the Pareto-front, using NSGA-III and DWT-based features in the resting-state with the eyes-open. In the resting-state with the eyes-closed, the TAR was $$0.997 \pm 0.02$$ 0.997 ± 0.02 and the TRR $$0.950 \pm 0.05,$$ 0.950 ± 0.05 , also using DWT-based features from three channels. These results show that our approach makes it possible to create a model for each subject using EEG signals from a reduced number of channels and reject most instances of the other 108 subjects, who are intruders in the model of the subject under evaluation. Furthermore, the candidates obtained throughout the optimization process of NSGA-III showed that it is possible to obtain TARs and TRRs above 0.900 using LOF and DWT- or EMD-based features with only one to three EEG channels, opening the way to testing this approach on bigger datasets to develop a more realistic and usable EEG-based biometric system.
High-density Electroencephalography (HD-EEG) has proven to be the EEG montage that estimates the neural activity inside the brain with highest accuracy. Multiple studies have reported the effect of electrode number on source localization for specific sources and specific electrode configurations. The electrodes for these configurations are often manually selected to uniformly cover the entire head, going from 32 to 128 electrodes, but electrode configurations are not often selected according to their contribution to estimation accuracy. In this work, an optimization-based study is proposed to determine the minimum number of electrodes that can be used and to identify the optimal combinations of electrodes that can retain the localization accuracy of HD-EEG reconstructions. This optimization approach incorporates scalp landmark positions of widely used EEG montages. In this way, a systematic search for the minimum electrode subset is performed for single- and multiple-source localization problems. The Non-dominated Sorting Genetic Algorithm II (NSGA-II) combined with source reconstruction methods is used to formulate a multi-objective optimization problem that concurrently minimizes (1) the localization error for each source and (2) the number of required EEG electrodes. The method can be used for evaluating the source localization quality of low-density EEG systems (e.g. consumer-grade wearable EEG). We performed an evaluation over synthetic and real EEG datasets with known ground-truth. The experimental results show that optimal subsets with 6 electrodes can attain an equal or better accuracy than HD-EEG (with more than 200 channels) for a single source case. This happened when reconstructing a particular brain activity in more than 88% of the cases in synthetic signals and 63% in real signals, and in more than 88% and 73% of cases when considering optimal combinations with 8 channels. For a multiple-source case of three sources (only with synthetic signals), it was found that optimized combinations of 8, 12 and 16 electrodes attained an equal or better accuracy than HD-EEG with 231 electrodes in at least 58%, 76%, and 82% of cases respectively. Additionally, for such electrode numbers, lower mean errors and standard deviations than with 231 electrodes were obtained.
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