Title of article :
EEG filtering based on blind source separation (BSS) for early detection of Alzheimerʹs disease
Author/Authors :
Andrzej Cichocki، نويسنده , , Sergei L. Shishkin، نويسنده , , Toshimitsu Musha، نويسنده , , Zbigniew Leonowicz، نويسنده , , Takashi Asada، نويسنده , , Takayoshi Kurachi، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Pages :
9
From page :
729
To page :
737
Abstract :
Objective Development of an EEG preprocessing technique for improvement of detection of Alzheimerʹs disease (AD). The technique is based on filtering of EEG data using blind source separation (BSS) and projection of components which are possibly sensitive to cortical neuronal impairment found in early stages of AD. Methods Artifact-free 20 s intervals of raw resting EEG recordings from 22 patients with Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI) who later proceeded to AD and 38 age-matched normal controls were decomposed into spatio-temporally decorrelated components using BSS algorithm ‘AMUSE’. Filtered EEG was obtained by back projection of components with the highest linear predictability. Relative power of filtered data in delta, theta, alpha 1, alpha 2, beta 1, and beta 2 bands were processed with Linear Discriminant Analysis (LDA). Results Preprocessing improved the percentage of correctly classified patients and controls computed with jack-knifing cross-validation from 59 to 73% and from 76 to 84%, correspondingly. Conclusions The proposed approach can significantly improve the sensitivity and specificity of EEG based diagnosis. Significance Filtering based on BSS can improve the performance of the existing EEG approaches to early diagnosis of Alzheimerʹs disease. It may also have potential for improvement of EEG classification in other clinical areas or fundamental research. The developed method is quite general and flexible, allowing for various extensions and improvements.
Keywords :
filtering , Alzheimer’s Disease , diagnosis , Blind source separation , EEG , AMUSE
Journal title :
Clinical Neurophysiology
Serial Year :
2005
Journal title :
Clinical Neurophysiology
Record number :
523242
Link To Document :
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