EEG based emotion monitoring using wavelet and learning vector quantization

EC Djamal, P Lodaya�- 2017 4th international conference on�…, 2017 - ieeexplore.ieee.org
EC Djamal, P Lodaya
2017 4th international conference on Electrical Engineering�…, 2017ieeexplore.ieee.org
Emotional identification is necessary for example in Brain Computer Interface (BCI)
application and when emotional therapy and medical rehabilitation take place. Some
emotional states can be characterized in the frequency of EEG signal, such excited, relax
and sad. The signal extracted in certain frequency useful to distinguish the three emotional
state. The classification of the EEG signal in real time depends on extraction methods to
increase class distinction, and identification methods with fast computing. This paper�…
Emotional identification is necessary for example in Brain Computer Interface (BCI) application and when emotional therapy and medical rehabilitation take place. Some emotional states can be characterized in the frequency of EEG signal, such excited, relax and sad. The signal extracted in certain frequency useful to distinguish the three emotional state. The classification of the EEG signal in real time depends on extraction methods to increase class distinction, and identification methods with fast computing. This paper proposed human emotion monitoring in real time using Wavelet and Learning Vector Quantization (LVQ). The process was done before the machine learning using training data from the 10 subjects, 10 trial, 3 classes and 16 segments (equal to 480 sets of data). Each data set processed in 10 seconds and extracted into Alpha, Beta, and Theta waves using Wavelet. Then they become input for the identification system using LVQ three emotional state that is excited, relax, and sad. The results showed that by using wavelet we can improve the accuracy of 72% to 87% and number of training data variation increased the accuracy. The system was integrated with wireless EEG to monitor emotion state in real time with change each 10 seconds. It takes 0.44 second, was not significant toward 10 seconds.
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