Abstract

A common drawback of EEG-based emotion recognition is that volume conduction effects of the human head introduce interchannel dependence and result in highly correlated information among most EEG features. These highly correlated EEG features cannot provide extra useful information, and they actually reduce the performance of emotion recognition. However, the existing feature selection methods, commonly used to remove redundant EEG features for emotion recognition, ignore the correlation between the EEG features or utilize a greedy strategy to evaluate the interdependence, which leads to the algorithms retaining the correlated and redundant features with similar feature scores in the EEG feature subset. To solve this problem, we propose a novel EEG feature selection method for emotion recognition, termed global redundancy minimization in orthogonal regression (GRMOR). GRMOR can effectively evaluate the dependence among all EEG features from a global view and then select a discriminative and nonredundant EEG feature subset for emotion recognition. To verify the performance of GRMOR, we utilized three EEG emotional data sets (DEAP, SEED, and HDED) with different numbers of channels (32, 62, and 128). The experimental results demonstrate that GRMOR is a promising tool for redundant feature removal and informative feature selection from highly correlated EEG features.

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