1. Selection of the optimal order for multivariate autoregressive model of electroencephalograms for patients with epilepsy
- Author
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Anton Popov, Volodymyr Kharytonov, and Ivan Kotiuchyi
- Subjects
medicine.diagnostic_test ,Mathematical model ,business.industry ,Computer science ,Covariance matrix ,Pattern recognition ,Electroencephalography ,Signal ,Discrete-time signal ,Autoregressive model ,medicine ,Range (statistics) ,Epileptic seizure ,Artificial intelligence ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
Introduction. Brain electrical activity signals (or EEG) by their very nature are non-stationary time series. This basically allows applying a set of mathematical-statistical analysis methods to them. One of the most common methods for signal analyzing is the construction of autoregressive mathematical models and analysis of their parameters in order to obtain additional information about the signal itself or causality between signals. In multivariate autoregressive (MVAR) modeling of EEG, the main issue is the optimal choice of model order. In this work, the approach for selecting the optimal order of MVAR models of brain electrical activity signals of subjects diagnosed with epilepsy is proposed. MVAR modeling. The autoregressive model assumes that the current sample of the discrete signal can be linearly predicted as a weighted sum of its previous samples. MVAR model extends this assumption to multiple time series so that the vector of current samples of all signals is modeled as a linear sum of their previous samples. MVAR models of EEG signals essentially are formed by solving systems of linear equations. The Yule-Walker method of linear equations systems solving is used in this paper. The accuracy of EEG modeling depends on the order of model. Each model order influenced by the amount of delay between current samples and last previous samples used to generate the model. To assess the order and quality of models the Schwarz-Bayes information criterion (SBC) is used in this work taking into account the covariance matrix of the residuals. Additionally, the quality is assessed by Pearson's correlation coefficient between the real and simulated data. In this paper, the MVAR modeling and statistical analysis of the models' optimal orders of the input signal periods before, during and after an epileptic seizure is carried out. Experimental results. Two sets of EEG data with generalized and focal epileptic seizures are used. The first group of patients with focal seizures consists of 26 people and more than 100 epileptic seizures. The second group with generalized seizures consists of 11 people and about 50 epileptic seizures. For EEG signals modeling, values of orders in a range from 1 to 22 are used. Consequently, for each investigated period of signal (before, during and after a seizure), 22 different MVAR models are constructed and compared. After modeling, the obtained models for each order value are evaluated using the SBC criterion. Conclusions. According to the results, it is recommended to choose the order of MVAR models of EEG signals in the predefined range of orders from 11 to 13. Since the sampling rate of the signals used in these experiments is 250 Hz, the specified range of order values indicates that MVAR-modelling of one signal includes information that contains all other signals with a delay of 44-52 ms. Therefore, theoretically, it is possible to allocate functional characteristics of brain electrical activity for patients with epilepsy that occur synchronously in different parts of the brain and spread at an average of 50 ms. Moreover, the ways of further research of electrical brain activity and functional connections of brain regions during epileptic activity are indicated.
- Published
- 2018