4.7 Article

Movement Artifact Suppression in Wearable Low-Density and Dry EEG Recordings Using Active Electrodes and Artifact Subspace Reconstruction

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IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TNSRE.2023.3319355

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Active electrode; artifact subspace reconstruction; dry electrode; electroencephalogram; movement artifact; wearable low-density headset

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Wearable low-density dry EEG headsets have broad applications in decoding brain activity and brain-triggered interaction for healthy individuals. However, movement artifacts present challenges to their validity outside laboratory settings. This study explored the effectiveness of hardware and software solutions for low-density and dry EEG recordings in non-tethered settings. Results showed that active-electrode designs effectively corrected movement artifacts for dry electrodes, while the ASR pipeline was compromised by limited electrodes. This suggests that lightweight, minimally obtrusive dry EEG headsets should at least include an active-electrode infrastructure to maintain their validity and applicability in real-world scenarios.
Wearable low-density dry electroencephalogram (EEG) headsets facilitate multidisciplinary applications of brain-activity decoding and brain-triggered interaction for healthy people in real-world scenarios. However, movement artifacts pose a great challenge to their validity in users with naturalistic behaviors (i.e., without highly controlled settings in a laboratory). High-precision, high-density EEG instruments commonly embed an active electrode infrastructure and/or incorporate an auxiliary artifact subspace reconstruction (ASR) pipeline to handle movement artifact interferences. Existing endeavors motivate this study to explore the efficacy of both hardware and software solutions in low-density and dry EEG recordings against non-tethered settings, which are rarely found in the literature. Therefore, this study employed a LEGO-like electrode-holder assembly grid to coordinate three 3-channel system designs (with passive/active dry vs. passive wet electrodes). It also conducted a simultaneous EEG recording while performing an oddball task during treadmill walking, with speeds of 1 and 2 KPH. The quantitative metrics of pre-stimulus noise, signal-to-noise ratio, and inter-subject correlation from the collected event-related potentials of 18 subjects were assessed. Results indicate that while treating a passive-wet system as benchmark, only the active-electrode design more or less rectified movement artifacts for dry electrodes, whereas the ASR pipeline was substantially compromised by limited electrodes. These findings suggest that a lightweight, minimally obtrusive dry EEG headset should at least equip an active-electrode infrastructure to withstand realistic movement artifacts for potentially sustaining its validity and applicability in real-world scenarios.

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