SQI-DOANet: electroencephalogram-based deep neural network for estimating signal quality index and depth of anaesthesia.
Rui YuZhuhuang ZhouMeng XuMeng GaoMeitong ZhuShuicai WuXiaorong GaoGuangyu BinPublished in: Journal of neural engineering (2024)
Objective . Monitoring the depth of anaesthesia (DOA) during surgery is of critical importance. However, during surgery electroencephalography (EEG) is usually subject to various disturbances that affect the accuracy of DOA. Therefore, accurately estimating noise in EEG and reliably assessing DOA remains an important challenge. In this paper, we proposed a signal quality index (SQI) network (SQINet) for assessing the EEG signal quality and a DOA network (DOANet) for analyzing EEG signals to precisely estimate DOA. The two networks are termed SQI-DOANet. Approach . The SQINet contained a shallow convolutional neural network to quickly determine the quality of the EEG signal. The DOANet comprised a feature extraction module for extracting features, a dual attention module for fusing multi-channel and multi-scale information, and a gated multilayer perceptron module for extracting temporal information. The performance of the SQI-DOANet model was validated by training and testing the model on the large VitalDB database, with the bispectral index (BIS) as the reference standard. Main results . The proposed DOANet yielded a Pearson correlation coefficient with the BIS score of 0.88 in the five-fold cross-validation, with a mean absolute error (MAE) of 4.81. The mean Pearson correlation coefficient of SQI-DOANet with the BIS score in the five-fold cross-validation was 0.82, with an MAE of 5.66. Significance . The SQI-DOANet model outperformed three compared methods. The proposed SQI-DOANet may be used as a new deep learning method for DOA estimation. The code of the SQI-DOANet will be made available publicly athttps://github.com/YuRui8879/SQI-DOANet.
Keyphrases
- working memory
- deep learning
- functional connectivity
- resting state
- convolutional neural network
- neural network
- minimally invasive
- quality improvement
- machine learning
- emergency department
- optical coherence tomography
- high density
- healthcare
- coronary artery disease
- acute coronary syndrome
- social media
- adverse drug
- surgical site infection
- network analysis
- virtual reality