LGMay 25, 2016

Geometry-aware stationary subspace analysis

arXiv:1605.07785v18 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This is an incremental improvement for brain-computer interface data analysis, addressing a specific bottleneck in handling non-stationarity.

The paper tackled the problem of non-stationarity in data, such as in brain-computer interfaces, by proposing a geometry-aware stationary subspace analysis method that eliminates the need for whitening, reducing errors and demonstrating effectiveness on synthesized and real-world data.

In many real-world applications data exhibits non-stationarity, i.e., its distribution changes over time. One approach to handling non-stationarity is to remove or minimize it before attempting to analyze the data. In the context of brain computer interface (BCI) data analysis this may be done by means of stationary subspace analysis (SSA). The classic SSA method finds a matrix that projects the data onto a stationary subspace by optimizing a cost function based on a matrix divergence. In this work we present an alternative method for SSA based on a symmetrized version of this matrix divergence. We show that this frames the problem in terms of distances between symmetric positive definite (SPD) matrices, suggesting a geometric interpretation of the problem. Stemming from this geometric viewpoint, we introduce and analyze a method which utilizes the geometry of the SPD matrix manifold and the invariance properties of its metrics. Most notably we show that these invariances alleviate the need to whiten the input matrices, a common step in many SSA methods which often introduces errors. We demonstrate the usefulness of our technique in experiments on both synthesized and real-world data.

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