Meng-Ying Lei

h-index4
2papers
296citations

2 Papers

4.3SPNov 6, 2018
An amplitudes-perturbation data augmentation method in convolutional neural networks for EEG decoding

Xian-Rui Zhang, Meng-Ying Lei, Yang Li

Brain-Computer Interface (BCI) system provides a pathway between humans and the outside world by analyzing brain signals which contain potential neural information. Electroencephalography (EEG) is one of most commonly used brain signals and EEG recognition is an important part of BCI system. Recently, convolutional neural networks (ConvNet) in deep learning are becoming the new cutting edge tools to tackle the problem of EEG recognition. However, training an effective deep learning model requires a big number of data, which limits the application of EEG datasets with a small number of samples. In order to solve the issue of data insufficiency in deep learning for EEG decoding, we propose a novel data augmentation method that add perturbations to amplitudes of EEG signals after transform them to frequency domain. In experiments, we explore the performance of signal recognition with the state-of-the-art models before and after data augmentation on BCI Competition IV dataset 2a and our local dataset. The results show that our data augmentation technique can improve the accuracy of EEG recognition effectively.

0.9CVOct 22, 2018
Boosted Convolutional Neural Networks for Motor Imagery EEG Decoding with Multiwavelet-based Time-Frequency Conditional Granger Causality Analysis

Yang Li, Mengying Lei, Xianrui Zhang et al.

Decoding EEG signals of different mental states is a challenging task for brain-computer interfaces (BCIs) due to nonstationarity of perceptual decision processes. This paper presents a novel boosted convolutional neural networks (ConvNets) decoding scheme for motor imagery (MI) EEG signals assisted by the multiwavelet-based time-frequency (TF) causality analysis. Specifically, multiwavelet basis functions are first combined with Geweke spectral measure to obtain high-resolution TF-conditional Granger causality (CGC) representations, where a regularized orthogonal forward regression (ROFR) algorithm is adopted to detect a parsimonious model with good generalization performance. The causality images for network input preserving time, frequency and location information of connectivity are then designed based on the TF-CGC distributions of alpha band multichannel EEG signals. Further constructed boosted ConvNets by using spatio-temporal convolutions as well as advances in deep learning including cropping and boosting methods, to extract discriminative causality features and classify MI tasks. Our proposed approach outperforms the competition winner algorithm with 12.15% increase in average accuracy and 74.02% decrease in associated inter subject standard deviation for the same binary classification on BCI competition-IV dataset-IIa. Experiment results indicate that the boosted ConvNets with causality images works well in decoding MI-EEG signals and provides a promising framework for developing MI-BCI systems.