This paper examines the effects of compression on EEG signals, in the context of automated detection of epileptic seizures. Specifically, it examines the use of lossy compression on EEG signals in order to reduce the amount of data which has to be transmitted or stored, while having as little impact as possible on the information in the signal relevant to diagnosing epileptic seizures. Two popular compression methods, JPEG2000 and SPIHT, were used. A range of compression levels was selected for both algorithms in order to compress the signals with varying degrees of loss. This compression was applied to the database of epileptiform data provided by the University of Freiburg, Germany. The real-time EEG analysis for event detection automated seizure detection system was used in place of a trained clinician for scoring the reconstructed data. Results demonstrate that compression by a factor of up to 120:1 can be achieved, with minimal loss in seizure detection performance as measured by the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve of the seizure detection system.
Compression of biosignals is an important means of conserving power in wireless body area networks and ambulatory monitoring systems. In contrast to lossless compression techniques, lossy compression algorithms can achieve higher compression ratios and hence, higher power savings, at the expense of some degradation of the reconstructed signal. In this paper, a variant of the lossy JPEG2000 algorithm is applied to Electroencephalogram (EEG) data from the Freiburg epilepsy database. By varying compression parameters, a range of reconstructions of varying signal fidelity is produced. Although lossy compression has been applied to EEG data in previous studies, it is unclear what level of signal degradation, if any, would be acceptable to a clinician before diagnostically significant information is lost. In this paper, the reconstructed EEG signals are applied to REACT, a state-of-the-art seizure detection algorithm, in order to determine the effect of lossy compression on its seizure detection ability. By using REACT in place of a clinician, many hundreds of hours of reconstructed EEG data are efficiently analysed, thereby allowing an analysis of the amount of EEG signal distortion that can be tolerated. The corresponding compression ratios that can be achieved are also presented.
In recent years, there has been a growing interest in the compression of electroencephalographic (EEG) signals for telemedical and ambulatory EEG applications. Data compression is an important factor in these applications as a means of reducing the amount of data required for transmission. Allowing for a carefully controlled level of loss in the compression method can provide significant gains in data compression. Quantization is an easy to implement method of data reduction that requires little power expenditure. However, it is a relatively simple, noninvertible operation, and reducing the bit-level too far can result in the loss of too much information to reproduce the original signal to an appropriate fidelity. Other lossy compression methods allow for finer control over compression parameters, generally relying on discarding signal components the coder deems insignificant. SPIHT is a state of the art signal compression method based on the Discrete Wavelet Transform (DWT), originally designed for images but highly regarded as a general means of data compression. This paper compares the approaches of compression by changing the quantization level of the DWT coefficients in SPIHT, with the standard thresholding method used in SPIHT, to evaluate the effects of each on EEG signals. The combination of increasing quantization and the use of SPIHT as an entropy encoder has been shown to provide significantly improved results over using the standard SPIHT algorithm alone.
This paper outlines a scheme for compressing EEG signals based on the JPEG2000 image compression algorithm. Such a scheme could be used to compress signals in an ambulatory system, where low-power operation is important to conserve battery life; therefore, a high compression ratio is desirable to reduce the amount of data that needs to be transmitted. The JPEG2000 specification makes use of the wavelet transform, which can be efficiently implemented in embedded systems. The standard was broken down to its core components and adapted for use on EEG signals with additional compression steps added. Variations on the components were tested to maximize compression ratio (CR) while maintaining a low percentage root-mean-squared difference (PRD) and minimize power requirements. Initial tests indicate that the algorithm performs well in relation to other EEG compression methods proposed in the literature.
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