317 research outputs found

    Combining Deep Belief Networks and Bidirectional Long Short-Term Memory

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    This paper proposes a new combination of Deep Belief Networks (DBN) and Bidirectional Long Short-Term Memory (Bi-LSTM) for Sleep Stage Classification. Tests were performed using sleep stages of 25 patients with sleep disorders. The recording comes from electroencephalography (EEG), electromyography (EMG), and electrooculography (EOG) represented in signal form. All three of these signals processed and extracted to produce 28 features. The next stage, DBN Bi-LSTM is applied. The analysis of this combination compared with the DBN, DBN HMM (Hidden Markov Models), and Bi-LSTM. The results obtained that DBN Bi-LSTM is the best based on precision, recall, and F1 score

    The status of textile-based dry EEG electrodes

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    Electroencephalogram (EEG) is the biopotential recording of electrical signals generated by brain activity. It is useful for monitoring sleep quality and alertness, clinical applications, diagnosis, and treatment of patients with epilepsy, disease of Parkinson and other neurological disorders, as well as continuous monitoring of tiredness/ alertness in the field. We provide a review of textile-based EEG. Most of the developed textile-based EEGs remain on shelves only as published research results due to a limitation of flexibility, stickability, and washability, although the respective authors of the works reported that signals were obtained comparable to standard EEG. In addition, nearly all published works were not quantitatively compared and contrasted with conventional wet electrodes to prove feasibility for the actual application. This scenario would probably continue to give a publication credit, but does not add to the growth of the specific field, unless otherwise new integration approaches and new conductive polymer composites are evolved to make the application of textile-based EEG happen for bio-potential monitoring

    Real-time estimation of horizontal gaze angle by saccade integration using in-ear electrooculography

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    The manuscript proposes and evaluates a real-time algorithm for estimating eye gaze angle based solely on single-channel electrooculography (EOG), which can be obtained directly from the ear canal using conductive ear moulds. In contrast to conventional high-pass filtering, we used an algorithm that calculates absolute eye gaze angle via statistical analysis of detected saccades. The estimated eye positions of the new algorithm were still noisy. However, the performance in terms of Pearson product-moment correlation coefficients was significantly better than the conventional approach in some instances. The results suggest that in-ear EOG signals captured with conductive ear moulds could serve as a basis for lightweight and portable horizontal eye gaze angle estimation suitable for a broad range of applications. For instance, for hearing aids to steer the directivity of microphones in the direction of the user’s eye gaze
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