Abstract

Emotional decoding and automatic identification of major depressive disorder (MDD) are helpful for the timely diagnosis of the disease. Electroencephalography (EEG) is sensitive to changes in the functional state of the human brain, showing its potential to help doctors diagnose MDD. In this paper, an approach for identifying MDD by fusing interhemispheric asymmetry and cross-correlation with EEG signals is proposed and tested on 32 subjects [16 patients with MDD and 16 healthy controls (HCs)]. First, the structural features and connectivity features of the θ-, α-, and β-frequency bands are extracted on the preprocessed and segmented EEG signals. Second, the structural feature matrix of the θ-, α-, and β-frequency bands are added to and subtracted from the connectivity feature matrix to obtain mixed features. Finally, the structural features, connectivity features, and the mixed features are fed to three classifiers to select suitable features for the classification, and it is found that our mode achieves the best classification results using the mixed features. The results are also compared with those from some state-of-the-art methods, and we achieved an accuracy of 94.13%, a sensitivity of 95.74%, a specificity of 93.52%, and an F1-score (f1) of 95.62% on the data from Beijing Anding Hospital, Capital Medical University. The study could be generalized to develop a system that may be helpful in clinical purposes.

Highlights

  • Major depressive disorder (MDD) is a major mental disorder and is characterized by loss of interest, poor concentration, and even suicidal thoughts (Acharya et al, 2018).It has been reported that more than 264 million people worldwide suffer from depression, which heavily impacts quality of life (World Health Organization, 2020)

  • The statistical analysis was performed by onefactor analysis of variance (ANOVA) using SPSS 22.0

  • All the feature matrices are randomly divided into 10 groups, nine of which are used for training, and the other group is used for verification

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Summary

Introduction

Major depressive disorder (MDD) is a major mental disorder and is characterized by loss of interest, poor concentration, and even suicidal thoughts (Acharya et al, 2018). It has been reported that more than 264 million people worldwide suffer from depression, which heavily impacts quality of life (World Health Organization, 2020). An accurate diagnosis of MDD is of great importance for early intervention and effective treatment. Traditional diagnosis of MDD mainly depends on subjective evaluation of symptom intensity using interview sessions and psychiatric scales. These methods are useful but time consuming and sometimes may lead to misdiagnoses due to human and environmental factors. It is crucial to develop objective approaches to help clinicians diagnose MDD more effectively

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