2012
DOI: 10.3389/fnhum.2012.00112
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Correlated Components of Ongoing EEG Point to Emotionally Laden Attention – A Possible Marker of Engagement?

Abstract: Recent evidence from functional magnetic resonance imaging suggests that cortical hemodynamic responses coincide in different subjects experiencing a common naturalistic stimulus. Here we utilize neural responses in the electroencephalogram (EEG) evoked by multiple presentations of short film clips to index brain states marked by high levels of correlation within and across subjects. We formulate a novel signal decomposition method which extracts maximally correlated signal components from multiple EEG records… Show more

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Cited by 302 publications
(635 citation statements)
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“…This stronger universality assumption can potentially increase sensitivity as it involves estimation of fewer parameters. In correlated component analysis the weights are thus estimated through a single eigenvalue problem (Dmochowski et al, 2012),…”
Section: Correlated Components As An Eigenvalue Problemmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 3 more Smart Citations
“…This stronger universality assumption can potentially increase sensitivity as it involves estimation of fewer parameters. In correlated component analysis the weights are thus estimated through a single eigenvalue problem (Dmochowski et al, 2012),…”
Section: Correlated Components As An Eigenvalue Problemmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…CorrCA and CCA are designed to handle two views at a time. In case of multiple views we employed the scheme for combination proposed in Dmochowski et al (2012), i.e., the views are concatenated in time so that all pairwise combinations are compared. This method has the disadvantage that the number of samples in the concatenated data scales with the number of views as M (M − 1).…”
Section: Performance On Simulated Datamentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Wehbe et al (2014b) applies non-linear effects and deep learning to a similar paradigm. Approaches such as these are now starting to be applied to electrophysiological data also (Dmochowski et al 2012;Wehbe et al 2014b) which enables analyses at the temporal scale of natural language (in spontaneous speech we typically produce 3-4 words a second). And finally the modelling of the idiosyncratic semantic spaces of individual participants (Charest et al 2014) demonstrates that the subtle differences in concept meaning seen in different languages may be open to analysis, despite crosslanguage similarities in neural representations (Buchweitz et al 2012;Zinszer et al 2016) These tools continue to provide further evidence on the amodal (Fairhall et al, 2013;Liuzzi et al, 2015) or embodied (Fernandino et al, 2015Anderson et al, 2016) encoding of meaning of the brain.…”
Section: Closing Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%