4.7 Article

Spatio-Spectral Feature Representation for Motor Imagery Classification Using Convolutional Neural Networks

Journal

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TNNLS.2020.3048385

Keywords

Electroencephalography; Brain modeling; Mutual information; Decoding; Feature extraction; Probability; Entropy; Brain-computer interface (BCI); convolutional neural network (CNN); electroencephalography (EEG); explainable artificial intelligence (XAI); motor imagery (MI)

Funding

  1. Institute for Information and Communications Technology Promotion (IITP) Grant through the Korea Government (MSIT) [2015-0-00185]
  2. Development of Intelligent Pattern Recognition Softwares for Ambulatory Brain Computer Interface [2017-0-00451]
  3. Development of BCI based Brain and Cognitive Computing Technology for Recognizing User's Intentions using Deep Learning [2019-0-00079]
  4. Artificial Intelligence Graduate School Program, Korea University

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CNNs have been applied to EEG-based BCIs, but the high-dimensional feature space and subject-specific signal patterns require appropriate methods to enhance decoding accuracy. This study proposes a spatiospectral feature representation method to preserve multivariate information, achieving better classification results than state-of-the-art techniques. The decomposition model obtained relevance scores for electrode channels and frequency domains, confirming the validity of the approach.
Convolutional neural networks (CNNs) have recently been applied to electroencephalogram (EEG)-based brain-computer interfaces (BCIs). EEG is a noninvasive neuroimaging technique, which can be used to decode user intentions. Because the feature space of EEG data is highly dimensional and signal patterns are specific to the subject, appropriate methods for feature representation are required to enhance the decoding accuracy of the CNN model. Furthermore, neural changes exhibit high variability between sessions, subjects within a single session, and trials within a single subject, resulting in major issues during the modeling stage. In addition, there are many subject-dependent factors, such as frequency ranges, time intervals, and spatial locations at which the signal occurs, which prevent the derivation of a robust model that can achieve the parameterization of these factors for a wide range of subjects. However, previous studies did not attempt to preserve the multivariate structure and dependencies of the feature space. In this study, we propose a method to generate a spatiospectral feature representation that can preserve the multivariate information of EEG data. Specifically, 3-D feature maps were constructed by combining subject-optimized and subject-independent spectral filters and by stacking the filtered data into tensors. In addition, a layer-wise decomposition model was implemented using our 3-D-CNN framework to secure reliable classification results on a single-trial basis. The average accuracies of the proposed model were 87.15% (+/- 7.31), 75.85% (+/- 12.80), and 70.37% (+/- 17.09) for the BCI competition data sets IV_2a, IV_2b, and OpenBMI data, respectively. These results are better than those obtained by state-of-the-art techniques, and the decomposition model obtained the relevance scores for neurophysiologically plausible electrode channels and frequency domains, confirming the validity of the proposed approach.

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