Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
467845 Computer Methods and Programs in Biomedicine 2013 12 Pages PDF
Abstract

Evoked potentials (EPs) are of great interest in neuroscience, but their measurement is difficult as they are embedded in background spontaneous electroencephalographic (EEG) activity which has a much larger amplitude. The widely used averaging technique requires the delivery of a large number of identical stimuli and yields only an “average” EP which does not allow the investigation of the possible variability of single-trial EPs. In the present paper, we propose the use of a multi-task learning method (MTL) for the simultaneous extraction of both the average and the N single-trial EPs from N recorded sweeps. The technique is developed within a Bayesian estimation framework and uses flexible stochastic models to describe the average response and the N shifts between the single-trial EPs and this average. Differently from other single-trial estimation approaches proposed in the literature, MTL can provide estimates of both the average and the N single-trial EPs in a single stage. In the present paper, MTL is successfully assessed on both synthetic (100 simulated recording sessions with N = 20 sweeps) and real data (11 subjects with N = 20 sweeps) relative to a cognitive task carried out for the investigation of the P300 component of the EP.

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Physical Sciences and Engineering Computer Science Computer Science (General)
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