Linking Attention-Based Multiscale CNN With Dynamical GCN for Driving Fatigue Detection
Electroencephalography (EEG) signals have been proven to be one of the most predictive and reliable indicators for estimating driving fatigue state. However, how to make full use of EEG data for driving fatigue detection remains a challenge. Many existing methods include a time-consuming manual proc...
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Veröffentlicht in: | IEEE transactions on instrumentation and measurement 2021, Vol.70, p.1-11 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Electroencephalography (EEG) signals have been proven to be one of the most predictive and reliable indicators for estimating driving fatigue state. However, how to make full use of EEG data for driving fatigue detection remains a challenge. Many existing methods include a time-consuming manual process or tedious parameter tunings for feature extraction, which is inconvenient to train and implement. On the other hand, most models ignore or manually determine EEG connectivity features between different channels, thus failing to thoroughly exploit the intrinsic interchannel relations for classification. In this article, we introduce a new attention-based multiscale convolutional neural network-dynamical graph convolutional network (AMCNN-DGCN) model, aiming to conquer these two issues in a unified end-to-end model. AMCNN-DGCN starts with attention-based multiscale temporal convolutions to automatically learn frequency filters to extract the salient pattern from raw EEG data. Subsequently, AMCNN-DGCN uses dynamical graph convolutional networks (DGCNs) to learn spatial filters, in which the adjacency matrix is adaptively determined in a data-driven way to exploit the intrinsic relationship between channels effectively. With the temporal-spatial structure, AMCNN-DGCN can capture highly discriminative features. To verify the effectiveness of AMCNN-DGCN, we conduct a simulated fatigue driving environment to collect EEG signals from 29 healthy subjects (male/female = 17/12 and age = 23.28±2.70 years) through a remote wireless cap with 24 channels. The results demonstrate that our proposed model outperforms six widely used competitive EEG models with high accuracy of 95.65%. Finally, the critical brain regions and connections for driving fatigue detection were investigated through the dynamically learned adjacency matrix. |
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ISSN: | 0018-9456 1557-9662 |
DOI: | 10.1109/TIM.2020.3047502 |