학술논문

GFIL: A Unified Framework for the Importance Analysis of Features, Frequency Bands, and Channels in EEG-Based Emotion Recognition
Document Type
Periodical
Source
IEEE Transactions on Cognitive and Developmental Systems IEEE Trans. Cogn. Dev. Syst. Cognitive and Developmental Systems, IEEE Transactions on. 14(3):935-947 Sep, 2022
Subject
Computing and Processing
Signal Processing and Analysis
Emotion recognition
Electroencephalography
Feature extraction
Brain modeling
Time-frequency analysis
Time-domain analysis
Electrodes
Affective brain–computer interface (aBCI)
channel
electroencephalography (EEG)
emotion recognition
feature importance learning
frequency band
Language
ISSN
2379-8920
2379-8939
Abstract
Accurately and automatically recognizing the emotional states of human beings is the central task in affective computing. The electroencephalography (EEG) data, generated from the neural activities in brain cortex, provide us with a reliable data source to perform emotion recognition. Besides the recognition accuracy, it is also necessary to explore the importance of different EEG features, frequency bands, and channels in emotion expression. In this article, we propose a unified framework termed graph-regularized least square regression with feature importance learning (GFIL) to simultaneously achieve these goals by incorporating an autoweighting variable into the least square regression. Unlike the widely used trial-and-error manner, GFIL automatically completes the identification once it is trained. Specifically, GFIL can: 1) adaptively discriminate the contributions of different feature dimensions; 2) automatically identify the critical frequency bands and channels; and 3) quantitatively rank and select the features by the learned autoweighting variable. From the experimental results on the SEED_IV data set, we find GFIL obtained improved accuracies based on the feature autoweighting strategy, which are 75.33%, 75.03%, and 79.17% corresponding to the three cross-session recognition tasks (session1->session2, session1->session3, session2->session3), respectively. Additionally, the Gamma band is identified as the most important one and the channels locating in the prefrontal and left/right central regions are more important.