Per Steiner Halvorsen

h-index40
2papers

2 Papers

SPSep 24, 2023
A Multi-channel EEG Data Analysis for Poor Neuro-prognostication in Comatose Patients with Self and Cross-channel Attention Mechanism

Hemin Ali Qadir, Naimahmed Nesaragi, Per Steiner Halvorsen et al.

This work investigates the predictive potential of bipolar electroencephalogram (EEG) recordings towards efficient prediction of poor neurological outcomes. A retrospective design using a hybrid deep learning approach is utilized to optimize an objective function aiming for high specificity, i.e., true positive rate (TPR) with reduced false positives (< 0.05). A multi-channel EEG array of 18 bipolar channel pairs from a randomly selected 5-minute segment in an hour is kept. In order to determine the outcome prediction, a combination of a feature encoder with 1-D convolutional layers, learnable position encoding, a context network with attention mechanisms, and finally, a regressor and classifier blocks are used. The feature encoder extricates local temporal and spatial features, while the following position encoding and attention mechanisms attempt to capture global temporal dependencies. Results: The proposed framework by our team, OUS IVS, when validated on the challenge hidden validation data, exhibited a score of 0.57.

SPJun 18, 2025
Biaxialformer: Leveraging Channel Independence and Inter-Channel Correlations in EEG Signal Decoding for Predicting Neurological Outcomes

Naimahmed Nesaragi, Hemin Ali Qadir, Per Steiner Halvorsen et al.

Accurate decoding of EEG signals requires comprehensive modeling of both temporal dynamics within individual channels and spatial dependencies across channels. While Transformer-based models utilizing channel-independence (CI) strategies have demonstrated strong performance in various time series tasks, they often overlook the inter-channel correlations that are critical in multivariate EEG signals. This omission can lead to information degradation and reduced prediction accuracy, particularly in complex tasks such as neurological outcome prediction. To address these challenges, we propose Biaxialformer, characterized by a meticulously engineered two-stage attention-based framework. This model independently captures both sequence-specific (temporal) and channel-specific (spatial) EEG information, promoting synergy and mutual reinforcement across channels without sacrificing CI. By employing joint learning of positional encodings, Biaxialformer preserves both temporal and spatial relationships in EEG data, mitigating the interchannel correlation forgetting problem common in traditional CI models. Additionally, a tokenization module with variable receptive fields balance the extraction of fine-grained, localized features and broader temporal dependencies. To enhance spatial feature extraction, we leverage bipolar EEG signals, which capture inter-hemispheric brain interactions, a critical but often overlooked aspect in EEG analysis. Our study broadens the use of Transformer-based models by addressing the challenge of predicting neurological outcomes in comatose patients. Using the multicenter I-CARE data from five hospitals, we validate the robustness and generalizability of Biaxialformer with an average AUC 0.7688, AUPRC 0.8643, and F1 0.6518 in a cross-hospital scenario.