With the continuous development of portable noninvasive human sensor technologies such as brain–computer interfaces (BCI), multimodal emotion recognition has attracted increasing attention in the area of affective computing. This paper primarily discusses the progress of research into multimodal emotion recognition based on BCI and reviews three types of multimodal affective BCI (aBCI): aBCI based on a combination of behavior and brain signals, aBCI based on various hybrid neurophysiology modalities and aBCI based on heterogeneous sensory stimuli. For each type of aBCI, we further review several representative multimodal aBCI systems, including their design principles, paradigms, algorithms, experimental results and corresponding advantages. Finally, we identify several important issues and research directions for multimodal emotion recognition based on BCI.
At present, emotion recognition based on electroencephalograms (EEGs) has attracted much more attention. Current studies of affective brain-computer interfaces (BCIs) focus on the recognition of happiness and sadness using brain activation patterns. Fear recognition involving brain activities in different spatial distributions and different brain functional networks has been scarcely investigated. In this study, we propose a multifeature fusion method combining energy activation, spatial distribution, and brain functional connection network (BFCN) features for fear emotion recognition. The affective brain pattern was identified by not only the power activation features of differential entropy (DE) but also the spatial distribution features of the common spatial pattern (CSP) and the EEG phase synchronization features of phase lock value (PLV). A total of 15 healthy subjects took part in the experiment, and the average accuracy rate was 85.00% ± 8.13%. The experimental results showed that the fear emotions of subjects were fully stimulated and effectively identified. The proposed fusion method on fear recognition was thus validated and is of great significance to the development of effective emotional BCI systems.
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