Abstract

Mental stress is one of the serious factors that lead to many health problems. Scientists and physicians have developed various tools to assess the level of mental stress in its early stages. Several neuroimaging tools have been proposed in the literature to assess mental stress in the workplace. Electroencephalogram (EEG) signal is one important candidate because it contains rich information about mental states and condition. In this paper, we review the existing EEG signal analysis methods on the assessment of mental stress. The review highlights the critical differences between the research findings and argues that variations of the data analysis methods contribute to several contradictory results. The variations in results could be due to various factors including lack of standardized protocol, the brain region of interest, stressor type, experiment duration, proper EEG processing, feature extraction mechanism, and type of classifier. Therefore, the significant part related to mental stress recognition is choosing the most appropriate features. In particular, a complex and diverse range of EEG features, including time-varying, functional, and dynamic brain connections, requires integration of various methods to understand their associations with mental stress. Accordingly, the review suggests fusing the cortical activations with the connectivity network measures and deep learning approaches to improve the accuracy of mental stress level assessment.

Highlights

  • Mental stress is one of the contributing factors to health problems

  • We have presented a comprehensive review of EEG signal analysis methods for the assessment of mental stress

  • These various can be attributed to a number of variables, including the lack of a consistent procedure, brain regions of interest, type of stressor, duration of experiment, EEG signal processing, feature extraction technique, and the type of classifiers used

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Summary

Introduction

Mental stress is one of the contributing factors to health problems. It is defined as the human body’s response, controlled by the sympathetic nervous system (SNS) and hypothalamus–pituitary–adrenocortical axis (HPA axis), to mental, physical and emotional stimuli [1]. This expression can be used with regard to internal (personality structure) or external (dealing with problems) matters triggering various physiological and negative emotional changes [2]. Researchers have developed various methods to assess the stress level in its early stages to avoid the negative consequences on health and performance

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