Real-Time Ocular Artifacts Suppression from EEG Signals Using an Unsupervised Adaptive Blind Source Separation

Author(s):  
Farzaneh Shayegh ◽  
Abbas Erfanian
2014 ◽  
Vol 2014 ◽  
pp. 1-9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hong Zeng ◽  
Aiguo Song

An effective approach is proposed in this paper to remove ocular artifacts from the raw EEG recording. The proposed approach first conducts the blind source separation on the raw EEG recording by the stationary subspace analysis (SSA) algorithm. Unlike the classic blind source separation algorithms, SSA is explicitly tailored to the understanding of distribution changes, where both the mean and the covariance matrix are taken into account. In addition, neither independency nor uncorrelation is required among the sources by SSA. Thereby, it can concentrate artifacts in fewer components than the representative blind source separation methods. Next, the components that are determined to be related to the ocular artifacts are projected back to be subtracted from EEG signals, producing the clean EEG data eventually. The experimental results on both the artificially contaminated EEG data and real EEG data have demonstrated the effectiveness of the proposed method, in particular for the cases where limited number of electrodes are used for the recording, as well as when the artifact contaminated signal is highly nonstationary and the underlying sources cannot be assumed to be independent or uncorrelated.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Timothy Sherry

<p>An online convolutive blind source separation solution has been developed for use in reverberant environments with stationary sources. Results are presented for simulation and real world data. The system achieves a separation SINR of 16.8 dB when operating on a two source mixture, with a total acoustic delay was 270 ms. This is on par with, and in many respects outperforms various published algorithms [1],[2]. A number of instantaneous blind source separation algorithms have been developed, including a block wise and recursive ICA algorithm, and a clustering based algorithm, able to obtain up to 110 dB SIR performance. The system has been realised in both Matlab and C, and is modular, allowing for easy update of the ICA algorithm that is the core of the unmixing process.</p>


2008 ◽  
Vol 19 (6) ◽  
pp. 958-970 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kuo-Kai Shyu ◽  
Ming-Huan Lee ◽  
Yu-Te Wu ◽  
Po-Lei Lee

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