4.7 Article

Dual Attention Relation Network With Fine-Tuning for Few-Shot EEG Motor Imagery Classification

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TNNLS.2023.3287181

Keywords

Brain-computer interfaces; electroencephalography (EEG); few-shot classification; meta-learning; motor imagery (MI)

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Recently, deep learning-based motor imagery (MI) electroencephalography (EEG) classification techniques have shown improved performance over conventional methods. However, accurately classifying unseen subjects remains challenging due to intersubject variability, scarcity of labeled data, and low signal-to-noise ratio (SNR). In this study, we propose a two-way few-shot network that efficiently learns representative features and performs classification with limited MI EEG data.
Recently, motor imagery (MI) electroencephalography (EEG) classification techniques using deep learning have shown improved performance over conventional techniques. However, improving the classification accuracy on unseen subjects is still challenging due to intersubject variability, scarcity of labeled unseen subject data, and low signal-to-noise ratio (SNR). In this context, we propose a novel two-way few-shot network able to efficiently learn how to learn representative features of unseen subject categories and classify them with limited MI EEG data. The pipeline includes an embedding module that learns feature representations from a set of signals, a temporal-attention module to emphasize important temporal features, an aggregation-attention module for key support signal discovery, and a relation module for final classification based on relation scores between a support set and a query signal. In addition to the unified learning of feature similarity and a few-shot classifier, our method can emphasize informative features in support data relevant to the query, which generalizes better on unseen subjects. Furthermore, we propose to fine-tune the model before testing by arbitrarily sampling a query signal from the provided support set to adapt to the distribution of the unseen subject. We evaluate our proposed method with three different embedding modules on cross-subject and cross-dataset classification tasks using brain-computer interface (BCI) competition IV 2a, 2b, and GIST datasets. Extensive experiments show that our model significantly improves over the baselines and outperforms existing few-shot approaches.

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