CSBrain: A Cross-scale Spatiotemporal Brain Foundation Model for EEG Decoding
June 29, 2025 Β· Declared Dead Β· π arXiv.org
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Authors
Yuchen Zhou, Jiamin Wu, Zichen Ren, Zhouheng Yao, Weiheng Lu, Kunyu Peng, Qihao Zheng, Chunfeng Song, Wanli Ouyang, Chao Gou
arXiv ID
2506.23075
Category
cs.HC: Human-Computer Interaction
Cross-listed
cs.LG,
eess.SP,
q-bio.NC
Citations
12
Venue
arXiv.org
Last Checked
4 months ago
Abstract
Understanding and decoding brain activity from electroencephalography (EEG) signals is a fundamental challenge in neuroscience and AI, with applications in cognition, emotion recognition, diagnosis, and brain-computer interfaces. While recent EEG foundation models advance generalized decoding via unified architectures and large-scale pretraining, they adopt a scale-agnostic dense modeling paradigm inherited from NLP and vision. This design neglects a core property of neural activity: cross-scale spatiotemporal structure. EEG task patterns span a wide range of temporal and spatial scales, from short bursts to slow rhythms, and from localized cortical responses to distributed interactions. Ignoring this diversity leads to suboptimal representations and weak generalization. We propose CSBrain, a Cross-scale Spatiotemporal Brain foundation model for generalized EEG decoding. CSBrain introduces: (i) Cross-scale Spatiotemporal Tokenization (CST), which aggregates multi-scale features from localized temporal windows and anatomical brain regions into compact scale-aware tokens; and (ii) Structured Sparse Attention (SSA), which captures cross-window and cross-region dependencies, enhancing scale diversity while removing spurious correlations. CST and SSA are alternately stacked to progressively integrate multi-scale dependencies. Experiments on 11 EEG tasks across 16 datasets show that CSBrain consistently outperforms task-specific and foundation model baselines. These results establish cross-scale modeling as a key inductive bias and position CSBrain as a robust backbone for future brain-AI research.
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