2 resultados para MFCC

em Deakin Research Online - Australia


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In neuroscience, the extracellular actions potentials of neurons are the most important signals, which are called spikes. However, a single extracellular electrode can capture spikes from more than one neuron. Spike sorting is an important task to diagnose various neural activities. The more we can understand neurons the more we can cure more neural diseases. The process of sorting these spikes is typically made in some steps which are detection, feature extraction and clustering. In this paper we propose to use the Mel-frequency cepstral coefficients (MFCC) to extract spike features associated with Hidden Markov model (HMM) in the clustering step. Our results show that using MFCC features can differentiate between spikes more clearly than the other feature extraction methods, and also using HMM as a clustering algorithm also yields a better sorting accuracy.

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Brain Computer Interface (BCI) is playing a very important role in human machine communications. Recent communication systems depend on the brain signals for communication. In these systems, users clearly manipulate their brain activity rather than using motor movements in order to generate signals that could be used to give commands and control any communication devices, robots or computers. In this paper, the aim was to estimate the performance of a brain computer interface (BCI) system by detecting the prosthetic motor imaginary tasks by using only a single channel of electroencephalography (EEG). The participant is asked to imagine moving his arm up or down and our system detects the movement based on the participant brain signal. Some features are extracted from the brain signal using Mel-Frequency Cepstrum Coefficient and based on these feature a Hidden Markov model is used to help in knowing if the participant imagined moving up or down. The major advantage in our method is that only one channel is needed to take the decision. Moreover, the method is online which means that it can give the decision as soon as the signal is given to the system. Hundred signals were used for testing, on average 89 % of the up down prosthetic motor imaginary tasks were detected correctly. This method can be used in many different applications such as: moving artificial prosthetic limbs and wheelchairs due to it's high speed and accuracy.