Author_Institution :
Dept. of Biomed. Eng., Mahidol Univ., Bangkok, Thailand
Abstract :
Attention Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) is a neurobehavioral disorder which leads to the difficulty on focusing, paying attention and controlling normal behavior. Globally, the prevalence of ADHD is estimated to be 6.5%. Medicine has been widely used for the treatment of ADHD symptoms, but the patient may have a chance to suffer from the side effects of drug, such as vomit, rash, urticarial, cardiac arrthymia and insomnia. In this paper, we propose the alternative medicine system based on the brain-computer interface (BCI) technology called neurofeedback. The proposed neurofeedback system simultaneously employs two important signals, i.e. electroencephalogram (EEG) and hemoencephalogram (HEG), which can quickly reveal the brain functional network. The treatment criteria are that, for EEG signals, the patient needs to maintain the beta activities (13-30 Hz) while reducing the alpha activities (7-13 Hz). Simultaneously, HEG signals need to be maintained continuously increasing to some setting thresholds of the brain blood oxygenation levels. Time-frequency selective multilayer perceptron (MLP) is employed to capture the mentioned phenomena in real-time. The experimental results show that the proposed system yields the sensitivity of 98.16% and the specificity of 95.57%. Furthermore, from the resulting weights of the proposed MLP, we can also conclude that HEG signals yield the most impact to our neurofeedback treatment followed by the alpha, beta, and theta activities, respectively.
Keywords :
brain-computer interfaces; electroencephalography; medical signal processing; multilayer perceptrons; patient treatment; signal classification; time-frequency analysis; ADHD symptoms; BCI-based neurofeedback system; EEG signals; EEG/HEG-based attention levels; HEG signals; alpha activities; alternative medicine system; attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder; beta activities; brain blood oxygenation levels; brain functional network; brain-computer interface technology; electroencephalogram; frequency 13 Hz to 30 Hz; frequency 7 Hz to 13 Hz; hemoencephalogram; neurobehavioral disorder; neurofeedback treatment; time-frequency selective multilayer perceptron; Blood; Electroencephalography; Games; Multilayer perceptrons; Neurofeedback; Neurons; Sensitivity;