2 research outputs found

    DESIGN AND IMPLEMENTATION OF WIRELESS BRAINWAVE STIMULATED ACCIDENT PREVENTION SYSTEM

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    Freak accidents are commonly hitting the headlines nowadays due to the moment the driver is careless. Mostly the accidents are common during night time due to the drowsiness of the driver. Adopting this as a major issue we have designed a system to detect the driver’s consciousness every moment and guide him or her throughout the journey. The proposed system is wireless and have been implemented with the help of an embedded processor. Our system picks up the brain signal of the driver every moment and transmitted through wireless transmitter module. In the receiver the signals are compared with different signals already stored in it. According to various threshold level programmed the vehicle is guided whether to drive fast, slow or to stop running. Application software has been developed with the help of high level graphical programming language (visual basic) to generate the prototype of brain waves. This system brings out an efficient solution for road accidents by early detection and alarm method

    A Novel Synergistic Model Fusing Electroencephalography and Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging for Modeling Brain Activities

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    Study of the human brain is an important and very active area of research. Unraveling the way the human brain works would allow us to better understand, predict and prevent brain related diseases that affect a significant part of the population. Studying the brain response to certain input stimuli can help us determine the involved brain areas and understand the mechanisms that characterize behavioral and psychological traits. In this research work two methods used for the monitoring of brain activities, Electroencephalography (EEG) and functional Magnetic Resonance (fMRI) have been studied for their fusion, in an attempt to bridge together the advantages of each one. In particular, this work has focused in the analysis of a specific type of EEG and fMRI recordings that are related to certain events and capture the brain response under specific experimental conditions. Using spatial features of the EEG we can describe the temporal evolution of the electrical field recorded in the scalp of the head. This work introduces the use of Hidden Markov Models (HMM) for modeling the EEG dynamics. This novel approach is applied for the discrimination of normal and progressive Mild Cognitive Impairment patients with significant results. EEG alone is not able to provide the spatial localization needed to uncover and understand the neural mechanisms and processes of the human brain. Functional Magnetic Resonance imaging (fMRI) provides the means of localizing functional activity, without though, providing the timing details of these activations. Although, at first glance it is apparent that the strengths of these two modalities, EEG and fMRI, complement each other, the fusion of information provided from each one is a challenging task. A novel methodology for fusing EEG spatiotemporal features and fMRI features, based on Canonical Partial Least Squares (CPLS) is presented in this work. A HMM modeling approach is used in order to derive a novel feature-based representation of the EEG signal that characterizes the topographic information of the EEG. We use the HMM model in order to project the EEG data in the Fisher score space and use the Fisher score to describe the dynamics of the EEG topography sequence. The correspondence between this new feature and the fMRI is studied using CPLS. This methodology is applied for extracting features for the classification of a visual task. The results indicate that the proposed methodology is able to capture task related activations that can be used for the classification of mental tasks. Extensions on the proposed models are examined along with future research directions and applications
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