Title :
Temporally constrained ICA: an application to artifact rejection in electromagnetic brain signal analysis
Author :
James, Christopher J. ; Gibson, Oliver J.
Author_Institution :
Biomed. Inf. Eng. Res. Group, Aston Univ., Birmingham, UK
Abstract :
Independent component analysis (ICA) is a technique which extracts statistically independent components from a set of measured signals. The technique enjoys numerous applications in biomedical signal analysis in the literature, especially in the analysis of electromagnetic (EM) brain signals. Standard implementations of ICA are restrictive mainly due to the square mixing assumption-for signal recordings which have large numbers of channels, the large number of resulting extracted sources makes the subsequent analysis laborious and highly subjective. There are many instances in neurophysiological analysis where there is strong a priori information about the signals being sought; temporally constrained ICA (cICA) can extract signals that are statistically independent, yet which are constrained to be similar to some reference signal which can incorporate such a priori information. We demonstrate this method on a synthetic dataset and on a number of artifactual waveforms identified in multichannel recordings of EEG and MEG. cICA repeatedly converges to the desired component within a few iterations and subjective analysis shows the waveforms to be of the expected morphologies and with realistic spatial distributions. This paper shows that cICA can be applied with great success to EM brain signal analysis, with an initial application in automating artifact extraction in EEG and MEG.
Keywords :
electroencephalography; independent component analysis; iterative methods; magnetoencephalography; medical signal processing; EEG; EM brain signal analysis; MEG; artifact extraction automation; artifact rejection; electromagnetic brain signal analysis; extracted sources; neurophysiological analysis; realistic spatial distributions; reference signal; signal recordings; signals extraction; square mixing assumption; strong a priori information; synthetic dataset; temporally constrained independent component analysis; Biomedical engineering; Biomedical measurements; Data mining; Digital recording; Electroencephalography; Electromagnetic analysis; Electromagnetic measurements; Independent component analysis; Principal component analysis; Signal analysis; Algorithms; Brain; Brain Mapping; Computer Simulation; Electroencephalography; Epilepsy; Humans; Magnetoencephalography; Models, Neurological; Models, Statistical; Principal Component Analysis; Quality Control;
Journal_Title :
Biomedical Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TBME.2003.816076