Automatic Classification of Motor Impairment Neural Disorders from EEG Signals Using Deep Convolutional Neural Networks

The analysis of biomedical signals, such as the EEGs for measuring brain activity, provides means for the diagnosis of various cognitive tasks and neural disorders. These signals are frequently transformed into visual representations such as spectrograms, which can reveal characteristic patterns and...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inElektronika ir elektrotechnika Vol. 24; no. 4; pp. 3 - 7
Main Authors Vrbancic, Grega, Podgorelec, Vili
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Kaunas University of Technology, Faculty of Telecommunications and Electronics 01.08.2018
Kaunas University of Technology
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Summary:The analysis of biomedical signals, such as the EEGs for measuring brain activity, provides means for the diagnosis of various cognitive tasks and neural disorders. These signals are frequently transformed into visual representations such as spectrograms, which can reveal characteristic patterns and serve as a basis for classification, when extracting specific features from them. We designed a new method that uses spectrogram images to feed them without any feature selection/extraction procedure directly into a deep convolutional neural network architecture and train it for the classification of motor impairment neural disorder in a person. The proposed method was tested on a set of (un)impaired subjects, where it outperformed the traditional machine learning methods. The results, obtained without any human intervention and by using all the default parameter values, turned out not to lag much behind an established state-of-the-art method, that takes advantage of using domain knowledge for the analysis of EEG recordings. Based on the experimental results we believe that the proposed method can be considered as a sound basis for further optimization towards a competitive, fully automated method for classification of EEG signals. Index Terms--Artificial neural networks; Biomedical signal processing; Electroencephalography; Image classification; Machine learning.
ISSN:1392-1215
2029-5731
DOI:10.5755/j01.eie.24.4.21469