DocumentCode
868867
Title
Mining reproducible activation patterns in epileptic intracerebral EEG signals: application to interictal activity
Author
Bourien, Jérôme ; Bellanger, J.J. ; Bartolomei, Fabrice ; Chauvel, Patrick ; Wendling, Fabrice
Author_Institution
Lab. Traitement du Signal et de l´´Image, Rennes I Univ., France
Volume
51
Issue
2
fYear
2004
Firstpage
304
Lastpage
315
Abstract
The study of interictal transient events may substantially complement the analysis of seizures in the presurgical evaluation of intractable epilepsy. A comprehensive methodology of quantifying reproducibility of activation patterns in intracerebral electroencephalography signals is presented. It may be applied to various forms of transient epileptic events under the assumption that a time of occurrence may be assigned to them. In this paper, the method is used on two different forms of interictal events (interictal spikes or sharpwaves and transient bursts of fast activity). The methodology is based on signal processing and data mining algorithms and proceeds in three steps: (1) detection of transient paroxysmal events (monochannel event); (2) identification of quasisynchronous transient paroxysmal events (multichannel events); and (3) automatic extraction of similar activation patterns. Results show that the methodology allows reproducible sequential activation sets to be identified from signals recorded in four patients. Potential advantages of the method are discussed with respect to other approaches.
Keywords
data mining; diseases; electroencephalography; medical expert systems; medical signal processing; automatic extraction; data mining algorithms; decentralized detection; epileptic intracerebral EEG signals; interictal activity; interictal sharp waves; interictal spikes; interictal transient events; intractable epilepsy; monochannel event; multichannel events; presurgical evaluation; reproducible activation patterns; reproducible sequential activation sets; seizures analysis; similar activation patterns; transient fast activity bursts; transient paroxysmal events; Brain; Data mining; Electroencephalography; Epilepsy; Reproducibility of results; Signal analysis; Signal processing; Signal processing algorithms; Surgery; Transient analysis; Algorithms; Brain; Brain Mapping; Cerebral Cortex; Databases, Factual; Diagnosis, Computer-Assisted; Electrodes, Implanted; Electroencephalography; Epilepsy; Humans; Information Storage and Retrieval; Reproducibility of Results; Seizures; Sensitivity and Specificity;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Biomedical Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9294
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TBME.2003.820397
Filename
1262108
Link To Document