Abstract

ObjectiveCluster analysis of spatio-temporal event-related potential (ERP) data is a promising tool for exploring the measurement time window of ERPs. However, even after preprocessing, the remaining noise can result in uncertain cluster maps followed by unreliable time windows while clustering via conventional clustering methods. MethodsWe designed an ensemble deep clustering pipeline to determine a reliable time window for the ERP of interest from temporal concatenated grand average ERP data. The proposed pipeline includes semi-supervised deep clustering methods initialized by consensus clustering and unsupervised deep clustering methods with end-to-end architectures. Ensemble clustering from those deep clusterings was used by the designed adaptive time window determination to estimate the time window. ResultsAfter applying simulated and real ERP data, our method successfully obtained the time window for identifying the P3 components (as the interest of both ERP studies) while additional noise (e.g., adding 20 dB to −5 dB white Gaussian noise) was added to the prepared data. ConclusionCompared to the state-of-the-art clustering methods, a superior clustering performance was yielded from both ERP data. Furthermore, more stable and precise time windows were elicited as the noise increased. SignificanceOur study provides a complementary understanding of identifying the cognitive process using deep clustering analysis to the existing studies. Our finding suggests that deep clustering can be used to identify the ERP of interest when the data is imperfect after preprocessing.

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