Abstract

(1) Background: Emotion recognition based on EEG signals is a rapidly growing and promising research field in affective computing. However, traditional methods have focused on single-channel features that reflect time-domain or frequency-domain information of the EEG, as well as bi-channel features that reveal channel-wise relationships across brain regions. Despite these efforts, the mechanism of mutual interactions between EEG rhythms under different emotional expressions remains largely unexplored. Currently, the primary form of information interaction between EEG rhythms is phase-amplitude coupling (PAC), which results in computational complexity and high computational cost. (2) Methods: To address this issue, we proposed a method of extracting inter-bands correlation (IBC) features via canonical correlation analysis (CCA) based on differential entropy (DE) features. This approach eliminates the need for surrogate testing and reduces computational complexity. (3) Results: Our experiments verified the effectiveness of IBC features through several tests, demonstrating that the more correlated features between EEG frequency bands contribute more to emotion classification accuracy. We then fused IBC features and traditional DE features at the decision level, which significantly improved the accuracy of emotion recognition on the SEED dataset and the local CUMULATE dataset compared to using a single feature alone. (4) Conclusions: These findings suggest that IBC features are a promising approach to promoting emotion recognition accuracy. By exploring the mutual interactions between EEG rhythms under different emotional expressions, our method can provide valuable insights into the underlying mechanisms of emotion processing and improve the performance of emotion recognition systems.

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