Classification of patterns of EEG synchronization for seizure prediction

Clin Neurophysiol. 2009 Nov;120(11):1927-1940. doi: 10.1016/j.clinph.2009.09.002. Epub 2009 Oct 17.

Abstract

Objective: Research in seizure prediction from intracranial EEG has highlighted the usefulness of bivariate measures of brainwave synchronization. Spatio-temporal bivariate features are very high-dimensional and cannot be analyzed with conventional statistical methods. Hence, we propose state-of-the-art machine learning methods that handle high-dimensional inputs.

Methods: We computed bivariate features of EEG synchronization (cross-correlation, nonlinear interdependence, dynamical entrainment or wavelet synchrony) on the 21-patient Freiburg dataset. Features from all channel pairs and frequencies were aggregated over consecutive time points, to form patterns. Patient-specific machine learning-based classifiers (support vector machines, logistic regression or convolutional neural networks) were trained to discriminate interictal from preictal patterns of features. In this explorative study, we evaluated out-of-sample seizure prediction performance, and compared each combination of feature type and classifier.

Results: Among the evaluated methods, convolutional networks combined with wavelet coherence successfully predicted all out-of-sample seizures, without false alarms, on 15 patients, yielding 71% sensitivity and 0 false positives.

Conclusions: Our best machine learning technique applied to spatio-temporal patterns of EEG synchronization outperformed previous seizure prediction methods on the Freiburg dataset.

Significance: By learning spatio-temporal dynamics of EEG synchronization, pattern recognition could capture patient-specific seizure precursors. Further investigation on additional datasets should include the seizure prediction horizon.

Publication types

  • Comparative Study

MeSH terms

  • Electroencephalography / classification*
  • Humans
  • Neural Networks, Computer*
  • Predictive Value of Tests
  • Seizures / classification*
  • Seizures / diagnosis*
  • Seizures / physiopathology