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Wavelet Transform, Reconstructed Phase Space, and Deep Learning Neural Networks for EEG-Based Schizophrenia Detection.

Amjed Al FahoumAla'a Zyout
Published in: International journal of neural systems (2024)
This study proposes an innovative expert system that uses exclusively EEG signals to diagnose schizophrenia in its early stages. For diagnosing psychiatric/neurological disorders, electroencephalogram (EEG) testing is considered a financially viable, safe, and reliable alternative. Using the reconstructed phase space (RPS) and the continuous wavelet transform, the researchers maximized the differences between the EEG nonstationary signals of normal and schizophrenia individuals, which cannot be observed in the time, frequency, or time-frequency domains. This reveals significant information, highlighting more distinguishable features. Then, a deep learning network was trained to enhance the accuracy of the resulting image classification. The algorithm's efficacy was confirmed through three distinct methods: employing 70% of the dataset for training, 15% for validation, and the remaining 15% for testing. This was followed by a 5-fold cross-validation technique and a leave-one-out classification approach. Each method was iterated 100 times to ascertain the algorithm's robustness. The performance metrics derived from these tests - accuracy, precision, sensitivity, F1 score, Matthews correlation coefficient, and Kappa - indicated remarkable outcomes. The algorithm demonstrated steady performance across all evaluation strategies, underscoring its relevance and reliability. The outcomes validate the system's accuracy, precision, sensitivity, and robustness by showcasing its capability to autonomously differentiate individuals diagnosed with schizophrenia from those in a state of normal health.
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