GSII, LERIA
Abstract:Since last 2 decades, High Frequency Oscillations (HFOs) are studied as a promising biomarker to localize the epileptogenic zone of patients with refractory focal epilepsy. As HFOs visual detection is time consuming and subjective, automatization of HFO detection is required. Most HFO detectors were developed on invasive electroencephalograms (iEEG) whereas scalp electroencephalograms (EEG) are used in clinical routine. In order HFO detection can benefit to more patients, scalp HFO detectors has to be developed. However, HFOs identification in scalp EEG is more challenging than in iEEG since scalp HFOs are of lower rate, lower amplitude and more likely to be corrupted by several sources of artifacts than iEEG HFOs. The main goal of this study is to explore the ability of deep learning architecture to identify scalp HFOs from the remaining EEG signal. Hence, a binary classification Convolutional Neural Network (CNN) is learned to analyze High Density Electroencephalograms (HD-EEG). EEG signals are first mapped into a 2D time-frequency image, several color definitions are then used as an input for the CNN. Experimental results show that deep learning allows simple end-to-end learning of preprocessing, feature extraction and classification modules while reaching competitive performance.