Abstract

Electrical activities of the human brain can be recorded with electroencephalography (EEG). To characterize motor imagery (MI) tasks for brain–computer interface (BCI) implementation is an easy and cost-effective tool. The MI task is represented by a short-time trial of multichannel EEG. In this paper, the signal of each channel of raw EEG is decomposed into a finite set of narrowband signals using a Fourier-transformation-based bandpass filter. Rhythmic components of EEG are represented by each of the narrowband signals that characterize the brain activities related to MI tasks. The subband signals are arranged to extend the dimension of the EEG trial in the spatial domain. The spatial features are extracted from the set of extended trials using a common spatial pattern (CSP). An optimum number of features are employed to classify the motor imagery tasks using an artificial neural network. An integrated approach with full-band and narrowband signals is implemented to derive discriminative features for MI classification. In addition, the subject-dependent parameter optimization scheme enhances the performance of the proposed method. The performance evaluation of the proposed method is obtained using two publicly available benchmark datasets (Dataset I and Dataset II). The experimental results in terms of classification accuracy (93.88% with Dataset I and 91.55% with Dataset II) show that it performs better than the recently developed algorithms. The enhanced MI classification accuracy is very much applicable in BCI implementation.

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