Developing a Multi-channel Beamformer by Enhancing Spatially Constrained ICA for Recovery of Correlated EEG Sources

Brain source imaging based on electroencephalogram (EEG) data aims to recover the neuron populations' activity producing the scalp potentials. This procedure is known as the EEG inverse problem. Recently, beamformers have gained a lot of consideration in the EEG inverse problem. Beamformers lac...

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Published inJournal of biomedical physics and engineering Vol. 11; no. 2; pp. 205 - 214
Main Authors Samadzadehaghdam, Nasser, MakkiAbadi, Bahador, Eqlimi, Ehsan, Mohagheghian, Fahimeh, Khajehpoor, Hassan, Harirchian, Mohammad Hossein
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Iran Shiraz University of Medical Sciences 01.04.2021
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Summary:Brain source imaging based on electroencephalogram (EEG) data aims to recover the neuron populations' activity producing the scalp potentials. This procedure is known as the EEG inverse problem. Recently, beamformers have gained a lot of consideration in the EEG inverse problem. Beamformers lack acceptable performance in the case of correlated brain sources. These sources happen when some regions of the brain have simultaneous or correlated activities such as auditory stimulation or moving left and right extremities of the body at the same time. In this paper, we have developed a multichannel beamformer robust to correlated sources. In this simulation study, we have looked at the problem of brain source imaging and beamforming from a blind source separation point of view. We focused on the spatially constraint independent component analysis (scICA) algorithm, which generally benefits from the pre-known partial information of mixing matrix, and modified the steps of the algorithm in a way that makes it more robust to correlated sources. We called the modified scICA algorithm Multichannel ICA based EEG Beamformer (MIEB). We evaluated the proposed algorithm on simulated EEG data and compared its performance quantitatively with three algorithms scICA, linearly-constrained minimum-variance (LCMV) and Dual-Core beamformers; it is considered that the latter is specially designed to reconstruct correlated sources. The MIEB algorithm has much better performance in terms of normalized mean squared error in recovering the correlated/uncorrelated sources both in noise free and noisy synthetic EEG signals. Therefore, it could be used as a robust beamformer in recovering correlated brain sources.
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ISSN:2251-7200
2251-7200
DOI:10.31661/jbpe.v0i0.801