Know Your Mind: Adaptive Brain Signal Classification with Reinforced Attentive Convolutional Neural Networks

February 12, 2018 Β· Declared Dead Β· πŸ› arXiv.org

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Authors Xiang Zhang, Lina Yao, Xianzhi Wang, Wenjie Zhang, Shuai Zhang, Yunhao Liu arXiv ID 1802.03996 Category cs.HC: Human-Computer Interaction Citations 11 Venue arXiv.org Last Checked 4 months ago
Abstract
Electroencephalography (EEG) signals reflect activities on certain brain areas. Effective classification of time-varying EEG signals is still challenging. First, EEG signal processing and feature engineering are time-consuming and highly rely on expert knowledge. In addition, most existing studies focus on domain-specific classification algorithms which may not be applicable to other domains. Moreover, the EEG signal usually has a low signal-to-noise ratio and can be easily corrupted. In this regard, we propose a generic EEG signal classification framework that accommodates a wide range of applications to address the aforementioned issues. The proposed framework develops a reinforced selective attention model to automatically choose the distinctive information among the raw EEG signals. A convolutional mapping operation is employed to dynamically transform the selected information to an over-complete feature space, wherein implicit spatial dependency of EEG samples distribution is able to be uncovered. We demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed framework using three representative scenarios: intention recognition with motor imagery EEG, person identification, and neurological diagnosis. Three widely used public datasets and a local dataset are used for our evaluation. The experiments show that our framework outperforms the state-of-the-art baselines and achieves the accuracy of more than 97% on all the datasets with low latency and good resilience of handling complex EEG signals across various domains. These results confirm the suitability of the proposed generic approach for a range of problems in the realm of Brain-Computer Interface applications.
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