Vaibhav Gollapalli

2papers

2 Papers

6.4LGApr 2
Cognitive Energy Modeling for Neuroadaptive Human-Machine Systems using EEG and WGAN-GP

Sriram Sattiraju, Vaibhav Gollapalli, Aryan Shah et al.

Electroencephalography (EEG) provides a non-invasive insight into the brain's cognitive and emotional dynamics. However, modeling how these states evolve in real time and quantifying the energy required for such transitions remains a major challenge. The Schrödinger Bridge Problem (SBP) offers a principled probabilistic framework to model the most efficient evolution between the brain states, interpreted as a measure of cognitive energy cost. While generative models such as GANs have been widely used to augment EEG data, it remains unclear whether synthetic EEG preserves the underlying dynamical structure required for transition-based analysis. In this work, we address this gap by using SBP-derived transport cost as a metric to evaluate whether GAN-generated EEG retains the distributional geometry necessary for energy-based modeling of cognitive state transitions. We compare transition energies derived from real and synthetic EEG collected during Stroop tasks and demonstrate strong agreement across group and participant-level analyses. These results indicate that synthetic EEG preserves the transition structure required for SBP-based modeling, enabling its use in data-efficient neuroadaptive systems. We further present a framework in which SBP-derived cognitive energy serves as a control signal for adaptive human-machine systems, supporting real-time adjustment of system behavior in response to user cognitive and affective state.

25.6SPApr 21
A Hybrid Windkessel-Neural Approach for Improved Noninvasive Blood Pressure Monitoring

Vaibhav Gollapalli, Aniruth Ananthanarayanan

Owing to the recent advancements in wearable devices for health care, the importance of BP estimation without cuffs increases. Cuff technologies are inappropriate for continuous BP measurement due to their inconvenient usage, invasive character, necessity of calibration, large size, and inability to perform long-term monitoring. Normally, the algorithm used for cuffless BP prediction employs machine learning models that operate according to the data-driven approach. However, although they show high numerical accuracy, ML models do not provide any interpretability, resulting in poor physiological validity and clinical applicability. We propose a combination of Windkessel and ML models that incorporates the physical aspects into the latter one. It is performed by reformulating Windkessel into a form that will allow employing ML models. The result is a system of ODEs which can be used in the neural network. Thus, the inclusion of physical constraints improves the data-driven approach by making models consistent with physics, understandable, and robust. For illustration, we apply the described technique using a publicly available MIMIC-II database that we obtain from the UCI Machine Learning Repository.