Abstract

Electroencephalography (EEG) is an important noninvasive neural recording technique with a broad application in the field of neurological instrumentation and measurement. However, EEG signals are often contaminated by muscle artifacts, adversely affecting the subsequent analysis. Joint blind source separation (JBSS) models have been successfully applied to remove muscle artifacts from EEG recordings, although most of them were designed for EEG collected in well-controlled conditions. Without considering the dynamics of underlying mixtures in complex environments may hinder the real mobile and long-term healthcare monitoring. To deal with such concern, we assume that the mixing process of sources dynamically changes over time and propose a state-dependent JBSS model by integrating the hidden Markov model with independent vector analysis in a maximum likelihood framework. It is capable of identifying the varying sources of muscle artifact components and underlying EEG signals. The proposed method was evaluated on both simulated and semi-simulated data, and demonstrated superior performance compared with other popular approaches for muscle artifacts removal in dynamic environments. The state-dependent JBSS model provides a novel way to investigate the temporal dynamics of multiple multidimensional biomedical data sets simultaneously.

Full Text
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