• Title of article

    A system for automatic artifact removal in ictal scalp EEG based on independent component analysis and Bayesian classification

  • Author/Authors

    P. LeVan، نويسنده , , E. Urrestarazu، نويسنده , , J. Gotman، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
  • Pages
    16
  • From page
    912
  • To page
    927
  • Abstract
    Objective To devise an automated system to remove artifacts from ictal scalp EEG, using independent component analysis (ICA). Methods A Bayesian classifier was used to determine the probability that 2 s epochs of seizure segments decomposed by ICA represented EEG activity, as opposed to artifact. The classifier was trained using numerous statistical, spectral, and spatial features. The systemʹs performance was then assessed using separate validation data. Results The classifier identified epochs representing EEG activity in the validation dataset with a sensitivity of 82.4% and a specificity of 83.3%. An ICA component was considered to represent EEG activity if the sum of the probabilities that its epochs represented EEG exceeded a threshold predetermined using the training data. Otherwise, the component represented artifact. Using this threshold on the validation set, the identification of EEG components was performed with a sensitivity of 87.6% and a specificity of 70.2%. Most misclassified components were a mixture of EEG and artifactual activity. Conclusions The automated system successfully rejected a good proportion of artifactual components extracted by ICA, while preserving almost all EEG components. The misclassification rate was comparable to the variability observed in human classification. Significance Current ICA methods of artifact removal require a tedious visual classification of the components. The proposed system automates this process and removes simultaneously multiple types of artifacts.
  • Keywords
    Automatic , Independent component analysis , artifacts , EEG , Seizure , Bayesian classifiers
  • Journal title
    Clinical Neurophysiology
  • Serial Year
    2006
  • Journal title
    Clinical Neurophysiology
  • Record number

    523560