Evoked potentials (EPs) are of great interest in neuroscience, but their measurement is difficult as they are embedded in background spontaneous electroencephalogaphic (EEG) activity which has a much larger amplitude. The widely used averaging technique requires the delivery of a large number of identical stimuli and yields only an "average" EP which does not allow the investigation of the possible variability of single-trial EPs. In the present paper, we propose the use of a multi-task learning method (MTL) for the simultaneous extraction of both the average and the N single-trial EPs from N recorded sweeps. The technique is developed within a Bayesian estimation framework and uses flexible stochastic models to describe the average response and the N shifts between the single-trial EPs and this average. Differently from other single-trial estimation approaches proposed in the literature, MTL can provide estimates of both the average and the N single-trial EPs in a single stage. In the present paper, MTL is successfully assessed on both synthetic (100 simulated recording sessions with N = 20 sweeps) and real data (11 subjects with N = 20 sweeps) relative to a cognitive task carried out for the investigation of the P300 component of the EP.

A multi-task learning approach for the extraction of single-trial evoked potentials

DE NICOLAO, GIUSEPPE;
2013-01-01

Abstract

Evoked potentials (EPs) are of great interest in neuroscience, but their measurement is difficult as they are embedded in background spontaneous electroencephalogaphic (EEG) activity which has a much larger amplitude. The widely used averaging technique requires the delivery of a large number of identical stimuli and yields only an "average" EP which does not allow the investigation of the possible variability of single-trial EPs. In the present paper, we propose the use of a multi-task learning method (MTL) for the simultaneous extraction of both the average and the N single-trial EPs from N recorded sweeps. The technique is developed within a Bayesian estimation framework and uses flexible stochastic models to describe the average response and the N shifts between the single-trial EPs and this average. Differently from other single-trial estimation approaches proposed in the literature, MTL can provide estimates of both the average and the N single-trial EPs in a single stage. In the present paper, MTL is successfully assessed on both synthetic (100 simulated recording sessions with N = 20 sweeps) and real data (11 subjects with N = 20 sweeps) relative to a cognitive task carried out for the investigation of the P300 component of the EP.
2013
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Esperti anonimi
Inglese
Internazionale
STAMPA
23
6
125
136
12
evoked potentials; multitask learning
5
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
262
D'Avanzo, C.; Goljahani, A.; Pillonetto, G.; DE NICOLAO, Giuseppe; Sparacino, G.
1 Contributo su Rivista::1.1 Articolo in rivista
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11571/807858
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