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Epileptic seizure detection using CHB-MIT dataset: The overlooked perspectives

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posted on 2024-07-09, 00:51 authored by Emran AliEmran Ali, Maia Angelova, Chandan KarmakarChandan Karmakar
Epilepsy is a life-threatening neurological condition. Manual detection of epileptic seizures (ES) is laborious and burdensome. Machine learning techniques applied to electroencephalography (EEG) signals are widely used for automatic seizure detection. Some key factors are worth considering for the real-world applicability of such systems: (i) continuous EEG data typically has a higher class imbalance; (ii) higher variability across subjects is present in physiological signals such as EEG; and (iii) seizure event detection is more practical than random segment detection. Most prior studies failed to address these crucial factors altogether for seizure detection. In this study, we intend to investigate a generalized cross-subject seizure event detection system using the continuous EEG signals from the CHB-MIT dataset that considers all these overlooked aspects. A 5-second non-overlapping window is used to extract 92 features from 22 EEG channels; however, the most significant 32 features from each channel are used in experimentation. Seizure classification is done using a Random Forest (RF) classifier for segment detection, followed by a post-processing method used for event detection. Adopting all the above-mentioned essential aspects, the proposed event detection system achieved 72.63% and 75.34% sensitivity for subject-wise 5-fold and leave-one-out analyses, respectively. This study presents the real-world scenario for ES event detectors and furthers the understanding of such detection systems.

History

Journal

Royal Society Open Science

Volume

11

Article number

ARTN 230601

Pagination

1-19

Location

London, Eng.

Open access

  • Yes

ISSN

2054-5703

eISSN

2054-5703

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

5

Publisher

The Royal Society

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