An Information Theoretic Approach Toward Assessing Perceptual Audio Quality Using EEG

In this paper, we propose a novel information theoretic model to interpret the entire "transmission chain" comprising stimulus generation, brain processing by the human subject, and the electroencephalograph (EEG) response measurements as a nonlinear, time-varying communication channel wit...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inIEEE transactions on molecular, biological, and multi-scale communications Vol. 1; no. 2; pp. 176 - 187
Main Authors Mehta, Ketan, Kliewer, Jörg
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published IEEE 01.06.2015
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Summary:In this paper, we propose a novel information theoretic model to interpret the entire "transmission chain" comprising stimulus generation, brain processing by the human subject, and the electroencephalograph (EEG) response measurements as a nonlinear, time-varying communication channel with memory. We use mutual information (MI) as a measure to assess audio quality perception by directly measuring the brainwave responses of the human subjects using a high resolution EEG. Our focus here is on audio where the quality is impaired by time varying distortions. In particular, we conduct experiments where subjects are presented with audio whose quality varies with time between different possible quality levels. The recorded EEG measurements can be modeled as a multidimensional Gaussian mixture model (GMM). In order to make the computation of the MI feasible, we present a novel low-complexity approximation technique for the differential entropy of the multidimensional GMM. We find the proposed information theoretic approach to be successful in quantifying subjective audio quality perception, with the results being consistent across different music sequences and distortion types.
ISSN:2372-2061
2372-2061
DOI:10.1109/TMBMC.2015.2501744