Neural correlates of emotions have been widely investigated using noninvasive sensor modalities. These approaches are often characterized by a low level of usability and are not practical for real-life situations. The aim of this study is to show that a single EEG electrode placed in the central region of the scalp is able to discriminate emotional characterized events with respect to a baseline period. Emotional changes were induced using an imagery approach based on the recall of autobiographical events characterized by four basic emotions: "Happiness", "Fear", "Anger" and "Sadness". Data from 17 normal subjects were recorded on Cz position according to the International 10-20 System. After preprocessing and artifact detection phases, raw signals were analyzed through a time-variant adaptive autoregressive model to extract EEG characteristic spectral components. We considered 5 frequency bands, i.e. the classical EEG rhythms, namely the delta band (δ), [1-4] Hz, the theta band (θ), [4-6] Hz, the alpha band (α), [6-12] Hz, the beta band (β), [12-30] Hz, and the gamma band (γ), [30-50] Hz. The relative powers of the EEG rhythms were used as features to compare the experimental conditions. Our results show statistically significant differences when comparing the power content in the gamma band of baseline events versus emotionally characterized events. Particularly, we found a significant increase in gamma band relative power in 3 out of 4 emotionally characterized events, i.e. “Happiness” “Sadness” and “Anger". In agreement with previous studies, our findings confirm the presence of a possible correlation between broader high frequency cortical activation and affective processing of the brain. The present study shows that the use of a single EEG electrode represents a possible advantageous premise for the assessment of the emotional state with a minimally invasive set-up.

Time-Varying Spectral Analysis of a Single EEG Channel: Application in an Affective Protocol, 2014-08-20.

Time-Varying Spectral Analysis of a Single EEG Channel: Application in an Affective Protocol

Onorati, Francesco;Russo, Vincenzo
2014-08-20

Abstract

Neural correlates of emotions have been widely investigated using noninvasive sensor modalities. These approaches are often characterized by a low level of usability and are not practical for real-life situations. The aim of this study is to show that a single EEG electrode placed in the central region of the scalp is able to discriminate emotional characterized events with respect to a baseline period. Emotional changes were induced using an imagery approach based on the recall of autobiographical events characterized by four basic emotions: "Happiness", "Fear", "Anger" and "Sadness". Data from 17 normal subjects were recorded on Cz position according to the International 10-20 System. After preprocessing and artifact detection phases, raw signals were analyzed through a time-variant adaptive autoregressive model to extract EEG characteristic spectral components. We considered 5 frequency bands, i.e. the classical EEG rhythms, namely the delta band (δ), [1-4] Hz, the theta band (θ), [4-6] Hz, the alpha band (α), [6-12] Hz, the beta band (β), [12-30] Hz, and the gamma band (γ), [30-50] Hz. The relative powers of the EEG rhythms were used as features to compare the experimental conditions. Our results show statistically significant differences when comparing the power content in the gamma band of baseline events versus emotionally characterized events. Particularly, we found a significant increase in gamma band relative power in 3 out of 4 emotionally characterized events, i.e. “Happiness” “Sadness” and “Anger". In agreement with previous studies, our findings confirm the presence of a possible correlation between broader high frequency cortical activation and affective processing of the brain. The present study shows that the use of a single EEG electrode represents a possible advantageous premise for the assessment of the emotional state with a minimally invasive set-up.
Inglese
20-ago-2014
20-ago-2014
http://jmbe.bme.ncku.edu.tw/index.php/bme/about/aboutThisPublishingSystem
Taiwanese Society of Biomedical Engineering
35
3
Taiwan, Province of China
internazionale
esperti anonimi
con ISI Impact Factor
Online
Settore M-PSI/06 - Psicologia Del Lavoro E Delle Organizzazioni
4
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10808/10367
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