Abstract

Over recent decades, electroencephalogram (EEG) has become an essential tool in the field of clinical analysis and neurological disease research. However, EEG recordings are notably vulnerable to artifacts during acquisition, especially in clinical settings, which can significantly impede the accurate interpretation of neuronal activity. Blind source separation is currently the most popular method for EEG denoising, but most of the sources it separates often contain both artifacts and brain activity, which may lead to substantial information loss if handled improperly. In this paper, we introduce a dual-threshold denoising method combining spatial filtering with frequency-domain filtering to automatically eliminate electrooculogram (EOG) and electromyogram (EMG) artifacts from multi-channel EEG. The proposed method employs a fusion of second-order blind identification (SOBI) and canonical correlation analysis (CCA) to enhance source separation quality, followed by adaptive threshold to localize the artifact sources, and strict fixed threshold to remove strong artifact sources. Stationary wavelet transform (SWT) is utilized to decompose the weak artifact sources, with subsequent adjustment of wavelet coefficients in respective frequency bands tailored to the distinct characteristics of each artifact. The results of synthetic and real datasets show that our proposed method maximally retains the time-domain and frequency-domain information in the EEG during denoising. Compared with existing techniques, the proposed method achieves better denoising performance, which establishes a reliable foundation for subsequent clinical analyses.

Full Text
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