scholarly journals A Multi-Column CNN Model for Emotion Recognition from EEG Signals

Sensors ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 19 (21) ◽  
pp. 4736 ◽  
Author(s):  
Heekyung Yang ◽  
Jongdae Han ◽  
Kyungha Min

We present a multi-column CNN-based model for emotion recognition from EEG signals. Recently, a deep neural network is widely employed for extracting features and recognizing emotions from various biosignals including EEG signals. A decision from a single CNN-based emotion recognizing module shows improved accuracy than the conventional handcrafted feature-based modules. To further improve the accuracy of the CNN-based modules, we devise a multi-column structured model, whose decision is produced by a weighted sum of the decisions from individual recognizing modules. We apply the model to EEG signals from DEAP dataset for comparison and demonstrate the improved accuracy of our model.

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hugo Mitre-Hernandez ◽  
Rodolfo Ferro-Perez ◽  
Francisco Gonzalez-Hernandez

BACKGROUND Mental health effects during COVID-19 quarantine need to be handled because patients, relatives, and healthcare workers are living with negative emotional behaviors. The clinical disorders of depression and anxiety are evoking anger, fear, sadness, disgust, and reducing happiness. Therefore, track emotions with the help of psychologists on online consultations –to reduce the risk of contagion– will go a long way in assisting with mental health. The human micro-expressions can describe genuine emotions of people and can be captured by Deep Neural Networks (DNNs) models. But the challenge is to implement it under the poor performance of a part of society's computers and the low speed of internet connection. OBJECTIVE This study aimed to create a useful and usable web application to record emotions in a patient’s card in real-time, achieving a small data transfer, and a Convolutional Neural Networks (CNN) model with a low computational cost. METHODS To validate the low computational cost premise, firstly, we compare DNN architectures results, collecting the floating-point operations per second (FLOPS), the Number of Parameters (NP) and accuracy from the MobileNet, PeleeNet, Extended Deep Neural Network (EDNN), Inception- Based Deep Neural Network (IDNN) and our proposed Residual mobile-based Network (ResmoNet) model. Secondly, we compare the trained models' results in terms of Main Memory Utilization (MMU) and Response Time to complete the Emotion recognition (RTE). Finally, we design a data transfer that includes the raw data of emotions and the basic text information of the patient. The web application was evaluated with the System Usability Scale (SUS) and a utility questionnaire by psychologists and psychiatrists (experts). RESULTS All CNN models were set up using 150 epochs for training and testing comparing the results for each variable in ResmoNet with the best model. It was obtained that ResmoNet has 115,976 NP less than MobileNet, 243,901 FLOPS less than MobileNet, and 5% less accuracy than EDNN (95%). Moreover, ResmoNet used less MMU than any model, only EDNN overcomes ResmoNet in 0.01 seconds for RTE. Finally, with our model, we develop a web application to collect emotions in real-time during a psychological consultation. For data transfer, the patient’s card and raw emotional data have 2 kb with a UTF-8 encoding approximately. Finally, according to the experts, the web application has good usability (73.8 of 100) and utility (3.94 of 5). CONCLUSIONS A usable and useful web application for psychologists and psychiatrists is presented. This tool includes an efficient and light facial emotion recognition model. Its purpose is to be a complementary tool for diagnostic processes.


2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 2726-2733

Extensively used technique to diagnose the epilepsy is EEG. The research objective is to check the variations of frequency found in the epileptic EEG signals.. The EEG dataset were acquired from online database of the Bonn University (BU). Then, butterworth type two filter was implemented to remove the unwanted artifacts from the acquired EEG signals. Further, Multivariate Variational Mode Decomposition (MVMD) methodology was applied to decompose the denoised EEG signals. The signal decomposition helps in finding the necessary information, which required to model the complex time series data. Then, the features were extracted from decomposed signals by using fifteen entropy, linear and statistical features. In addition, ant colony optimization technique was proposed for optimizing the extracted features. The optimized feature vectors were classified by Deep Neural Network (DNN) that includes two circumstances (seizure and healthy), and (Interictal, ictal, and normal). The accuracy attained using the ant colony with deep neural network is 98.12% using the BU EEG dataset, respectively related to the existing models.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
James Ren Hou Lee ◽  
Maya Pavlova ◽  
Mahmoud Famouri ◽  
Alexander Wong

Abstract Background: Skin cancer continues to be the most frequently diagnosed form of cancer in the U.S., with not only significant effects on health and well-being but also significant economic costs associated with treatment. A crucial step to the treatment and management of skin cancer is effective early detection with key screening approaches such as dermoscopy examinations, leading to stronger recovery prognoses. Motivated by the advances of deep learning and inspired by the open source initiatives in the research community, in this study we introduce Cancer-Net SCa, a suite of deep neural network designs tailored for the detection of skin cancer from dermoscopy images that is open source and available to the general public. To the best of the authors' knowledge, Cancer-Net SCa comprises the first machine-driven design of deep neural network architectures tailored specifically for skin cancer detection, one of which leverages attention condensers for an efficient self-attention design.Results: We investigate and audit the behaviour of Cancer-Net SCa in a responsible and transparent manner through explainability-driven performance validation. All the proposed designs achieved improved accuracy when compared to the ResNet-50 architecture while also achieving significantly reduced architectural and computational complexity. In addition, when evaluating the decision making process of the networks, it can be seen that diagnostically relevant critical factors are leveraged rather than irrelevant visual indicators and imaging artifacts. Conclusion: The proposed Cancer-Net SCa designs achieve strong skin cancer detection performance on the International Skin Imaging Collaboration (ISIC) dataset, while providing a strong balance between computation and architectural efficiency and accuracy. While Cancer-Net SCa is not a production-ready screening solution, the hope is that the release of Cancer-Net SCa in open source, open access form will encourage researchers, clinicians, and citizen data scientists alike to leverage and build upon them.


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