Abstract
This article uses the Adaptive Gaussian Representation (AGR) for human electroencephalogram (EEG) feature extraction aiming the discrimination among mental tasks to be used in a brain computer interface (BCI). It does not focus on the AGR time–frequency representation, but rather on their projection coefficients. Ten volunteers were asked to imagine either right or left hand movement, according to a proper visual stimulus. The features of the resulting EEG signals were characterised by extracting AGR coefficients. Classification was carried out using a Multilayer perceptron (MLP) trained with the classical backpropagation algorithm. Overall results show that AGR coefficients representation is able to reveal a significant EEG discrimination between imagination of right and left hand movement with a mean classification performance of 91%±5.8% achieved for female subjects and 87%±5.0% achieved for male subjects.
Published Version
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