ARMA modeling for the diagnosis of controlled epileptic activity in young children

 
This item is provided by the institution :

Repository :
Institutional Repository Technical University of Crete
see the original item page
in the repository's web site and access all digital files if the item*
share




2008 (EN)

ARMA modeling for the diagnosis of controlled epileptic activity in young children (EN)

Ζερβακης Μιχαλης (EL)
Μιχελογιάννης Σήφης (EL)
Zervakis Michalis (EN)
Camilleri K. P. (EN)
Cassar T. A. (EN)
Michelogiannis SifisMicheloyannis Sifis (EN)
Fabri S. G. (EN)

Πολυτεχνείο Κρήτης (EL)
Technical University of Crete (EN)

Parametric models are widely used for EEG data analysis. In this experimental study an autoregressive moving average (ARMA) model was used to extract spectral features within defined frequency bands which were then used to discriminate a group of children with controlled mild epilepsy from an age- and sex-matched control group. This study differs from other published works in that it shows that this technique can be used as a biomarker to distinguish the epileptic subjects specifically when the EEG recordings of these subjects are clinically diagnosed as normal. Using the spectral features and a linear discriminant classifier a global classification score of up to 85% was achieved on our clinical data. Furthermore the results showed that epileptic children have significantly higher spectral power in frequency bands up to 45 Hz, with the largest difference occurring within the alpha band. (EN)

full paper
conferenceItem

EEG,Electroencephalography (EN)
Data analysis (EN)
Epilepsy (EN)
Biomarkers (EN)
Brain modeling (EN)
Frequency (EN)
Feature extraction (EN)
Parametric statistics (EN)
Data mining (EN)
Autoregressive processes (EN)


3rd International Symposium on Communications, Control and Signal Processing (EL)

English

2008


Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (EN)




*Institutions are responsible for keeping their URLs functional (digital file, item page in repository site)