Title of article :
Generalized Information Equilibrium Approaches to EEG Sleep Stage Discrimination
Author/Authors :
Zorick, Todd Department of Psychiatry and Biobehavioral Sciences - Los Angeles, USA , Smith, Jason The Boeing Company - Seattle, USA
Abstract :
Recent advances in neuroscience have raised the hypothesis that the underlying pattern of neuronal activation which results in
electroencephalography (EEG) signals is via power-law distributed neuronal avalanches, while EEG signals are nonstationary.
Therefore, spectral analysis of EEG may miss many properties inherent in such signals. A complete understanding of such dynamical
systems requires knowledge of the underlying nonequilibrium thermodynamics. In recent work by Fielitz and Borchardt (2011,
2014), the concept of information equilibrium (IE) in information transfer processes has successfully characterized many different
systems far from thermodynamic equilibrium. We utilized a publicly available database of polysomnogram EEG data from fourteen
subjects with eight different one-minute tracings of sleep stage 2 and waking and an overlapping set of eleven subjects with eight
different one-minute tracings of sleep stage 3. We applied principles of IE to model EEG as a system that transfers (equilibrates)
information from the time domain to scalp-recorded voltages. We find that waking consciousness is readily distinguished from
sleep stages 2 and 3 by several differences in mean information transfer constants. Principles of IE applied to EEG may therefore
prove to be useful in the study of changes in brain function more generally.
Keywords :
Discrimination , EEG , Generalized
Journal title :
Computational and Mathematical Methods in Medicine