LGAIJan 16, 2025

Cueless EEG imagined speech for subject identification: dataset and benchmarks

arXiv:2501.09700v12 citationsh-index: 10IEEE Trans Biom Behav Identity Sci
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses biometric identification for brain-computer interfaces, but it is incremental as it builds on prior EEG methods by removing external cues.

The study tackled subject identification using EEG signals by introducing a cueless imagined speech paradigm, achieving 97.93% classification accuracy on a dataset of over 4,350 trials from 11 subjects.

Electroencephalogram (EEG) signals have emerged as a promising modality for biometric identification. While previous studies have explored the use of imagined speech with semantically meaningful words for subject identification, most have relied on additional visual or auditory cues. In this study, we introduce a cueless EEG-based imagined speech paradigm, where subjects imagine the pronunciation of semantically meaningful words without any external cues. This innovative approach addresses the limitations of prior methods by requiring subjects to select and imagine words from a predefined list naturally. The dataset comprises over 4,350 trials from 11 subjects across five sessions. We assess a variety of classification methods, including traditional machine learning techniques such as Support Vector Machines (SVM) and XGBoost, as well as time-series foundation models and deep learning architectures specifically designed for EEG classification, such as EEG Conformer and Shallow ConvNet. A session-based hold-out validation strategy was employed to ensure reliable evaluation and prevent data leakage. Our results demonstrate outstanding classification accuracy, reaching 97.93%. These findings highlight the potential of cueless EEG paradigms for secure and reliable subject identification in real-world applications, such as brain-computer interfaces (BCIs).

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