DocumentCode
46535
Title
Evoked Neural Responses to Events in Video
Author
Rosenthal, Daniel ; DeGuzman, Paul ; Parra, L.C. ; Sajda, Paul
Author_Institution
Neuromatters LLC, New York, NY, USA
Volume
8
Issue
3
fYear
2014
fDate
Jun-14
Firstpage
358
Lastpage
365
Abstract
In contrast to static imagery, detection of events of interest in video involves evidence accumulation across space and time; the observer is required to integrate features from both motion and form to decide whether a behavior constituents a target event. Do such events that extend in time elicit evoked responses of similar strength as evoked responses associated with instantaneous events such as the presentation of a static target image? Using a set of simulated scenarios, with avatars/actors having different behaviors, we identified evoked neural activity discriminative of target vs. distractor events (behaviors) at discrimination levels that are comparable to static imagery. EEG discriminative activity was largely in the time-locked evoked response and not in oscillatory activity, with the exception of very low EEG frequency bands such as delta and theta, which simply represent bands dominating the event related potential (ERP). The discriminative evoked response activity we see is observed in all target/distractor conditions and is robust across different recordings from the same subjects. The results suggest that we have identified a robust neural correlate of target detection in video, at least in terms of the stimulus set we used-i.e., dynamic behavior of an individual in a low clutter environment. Additional work is needed to test a larger variety of behaviors and more diverse environments.
Keywords
brain-computer interfaces; electroencephalography; object detection; video signal processing; EEG discriminative activity; ERP; event detection; event related potential; evidence accumulation; evoked neural responses; static target image; target detection; time elicit evoked responses; video signal processing; Acceleration; Data analysis; Data collection; Electroencephalography; Robustness; Streaming media; Watches; Video analysis; audio-visual systems; brain- computer interfaces; electroencephalography; machine learning; video surveillance;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Selected Topics in Signal Processing, IEEE Journal of
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1932-4553
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/JSTSP.2014.2313022
Filename
6777281
Link To Document