DocumentCode
2707008
Title
Automated assessment of vigilance using committees of radial basis function analysers
Author
Roberts, Stephen ; Rezek, Iead ; Everson, Richard ; Stone, Helen ; Wilson, Sue ; Alford, Chris
Author_Institution
Dept. of Eng., Oxford Univ., UK
fYear
2000
fDate
2000
Firstpage
231
Lastpage
237
Abstract
It is clear that whenever people perform repetitive, boring or long-term tasks, a loss in concentration can occur. These lapses in vigilance may have serious consequences under certain circumstances. Human cognitive processes are far from understood, and the processes by which individuals have lapses in alertness are many. In this paper, we consider the analysis of the human EEG during vigilance experiments as a case study in supervised data analysis. We address several issues which are found in many data analysis problems. The issue of finding informative signal parameterisations in multi-channel environments is approached using a feature selection process. Subsequent analysis uses Bayesian committees of radial basis function analysers. A comparison is made of two analysis approaches, the first based on regression and the second setting the problem as a classification task with extremal-label training. Results are presented for a representative sample of subjects. The assessment of vigilance from a small number of physiological measurements may be of importance in safety monitoring in a number of professions. We have shown that it is possible to make reasonable estimates of the state of alertness of a subject based on EEG and eye-movement information. The estimates appear to be fairly robust across subjects using appropriately-chosen features from the signals. However, in general, neither the smoothed labels (human-scored) nor the resultant estimated measures correlate well with the corresponding tracking performance measure
Keywords
Bayes methods; bioelectric potentials; electroencephalography; eye; medical signal processing; radial basis function networks; Bayesian committees; alertness estimation; alertness lapses; automated vigilance assessment; boring tasks; case study; classification task; extremal-label training; eye movement; feature selection process; human EEG; human cognitive processes; informative signal parameterisations; long-term tasks; multi-channel environments; physiological measurements; radial basis function analysers; regression; repetitive tasks; safety monitoring; smoothed labels; supervised data analysis; tracking performance measure;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
iet
Conference_Titel
Advances in Medical Signal and Information Processing, 2000. First International Conference on (IEE Conf. Publ. No. 476)
Conference_Location
Bristol
ISSN
0537-9989
Print_ISBN
0-85296-728-4
Type
conf
DOI
10.1049/cp:20000343
Filename
889977
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