| Literature DB >> 28647609 |
Fabio Montagna1, Marco Buiatti2, Simone Benatti3, Davide Rossi4, Elisabetta Farella5, Luca Benini6.
Abstract
EEG is a standard non-invasive technique used in neural disease diagnostics and neurosciences. Frequency-tagging is an increasingly popular experimental paradigm that efficiently tests brain function by measuring EEG responses to periodic stimulation. Recently, frequency-tagging paradigms have proven successful with low stimulation frequencies (0.5-6Hz), but the EEG signal is intrinsically noisy in this frequency range, requiring heavy signal processing and significant human intervention for response estimation. This limits the possibility to process the EEG on resource-constrained systems and to design smart EEG based devices for automated diagnostic. We propose an algorithm for artifact removal and automated detection of frequency tagging responses in a wide range of stimulation frequencies, which we test on a visual stimulation protocol. The algorithm is rooted on machine learning based pattern recognition techniques and it is tailored for a new generation parallel ultra low power processing platform (PULP), reaching performance of more that 90% accuracy in the frequency detection even for very low stimulation frequencies (<1Hz) with a power budget of 56mW.Entities:
Keywords: BCI; EEG; Embedded systems; Frequency-tagging; Machine learning; SVM
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28647609 DOI: 10.1016/j.ymeth.2017.06.019
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Methods ISSN: 1046-2023 Impact factor: 3.608