Abstract

Objectives The electroencephalogram (EEG) signal contains information about the state and condition of the brain. The aim of the study is to conduct a nonlinear analysis of the EEG signals and to compare the differences in the nonlinear characteristics of the EEG during normal state and the epileptic state. Data The EEG data used for this study – which consisted of epileptic EEG and normal EEG – were obtained from the EEG database available with the Bonn University, Germany. Results The attractors seen in normal and epileptic human brain dynamics were studied and compared. Surrogate data analyses were conducted on two nonlinear measures, namely the largest Lyapunov exponent and the correlation dimension, to test the hypothesis whether EEG signals were in accordance with linear stochastic models. Discussions The existence of deterministic chaos in brain activity is confirmed by the existence of a chaotic attractor; also, saturation of the correlation dimension towards a definite value is the manifestation of a deterministic dynamics. Also a reduction is observed between the dimensionalities of the brain attractors from normal state to the epileptic state. The evaluation of the largest Lyapunov exponent also confirms the lowering of complexity during an episode of seizure. Conclusion In case of Lyapunov exponent of EEG data, the change due to surrogating is small suggesting that it is not representing the system complexity properly but there is a marked change in the case of correlation dimension value due to surrogating.

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