Casson Alexander, Yates David, Smith Shelagh, Duncan John, Rodriguez-Villegas Esther
Department of Electrical and Electronic Engineering, Imperial College London, SW72AZ.
IEEE Eng Med Biol Mag. 2010 May-Jun;29(3):44-56. doi: 10.1109/MEMB.2010.936545.
The electroencephalogram (EEG) is a classic noninvasive method for measuring a person's brain waves and is used in a large number of fields: from epilepsy and sleep disorder diagnosis to brain-computer interfaces (BCIs). Electrodes are placed on the scalp to detect the microvolt-sized signals that result from synchronized neuronal activity within the brain. Current long-term EEG monitoring is generally either carried out as an inpatient in combination with video recording and long cables to an amplifier and recording unit or is ambulatory. In the latter, the EEG recorder is portable but bulky, and in principle, the subject can go about their normal daily life during the recording. In practice, however, this is rarely the case. It is quite common for people undergoing ambulatory EEG monitoring to take time off work and stay at home rather than be seen in public with such a device. Wearable EEG is envisioned as the evolution of ambulatory EEG units from the bulky, limited lifetime devices available today to small devices present only on the head that can record EEG for days, weeks, or months at a time. Such miniaturized units could enable prolonged monitoring of chronic conditions such as epilepsy and greatly improve the end-user acceptance of BCI systems. In this article, we aim to provide a review and overview of wearable EEG technology, answering the questions: What is it, why is it needed, and what does it entail? We first investigate the requirements of portable EEG systems and then link these to the core applications of wearable EEG technology: epilepsy diagnosis, sleep disorder diagnosis, and BCIs. As a part of our review, we asked 21 neurologists (as a key user group) for their views on wearable EEG. This group highlighted that wearable EEG will be an essential future tool. Our descriptions here will focus mainly on epilepsy and the medical applications of wearable EEG, as this is the historical background of the EEG, our area of expertise, and a core motivating area in itself, but we will also discuss the other application areas. We continue by considering the forthcoming research challenges, principally new electrode technology and lower power electronics, and we outline our approach for dealing with the electronic power issues. We believe that the optimal approach to realizing wearable EEG technology is not to optimize any one part but to find the best set of tradeoffs at both the system and implementation level. In this article, we discuss two of these tradeoffs in detail: investigating the online compression of EEG data to reduce the system power consumption and the optimal method for providing this data compression.
脑电图(EEG)是一种用于测量人脑电波的经典非侵入性方法,被广泛应用于众多领域:从癫痫和睡眠障碍诊断到脑机接口(BCI)。电极放置在头皮上,以检测大脑内同步神经元活动产生的微伏级信号。目前的长期脑电图监测通常要么作为住院患者,结合视频记录,并通过长电缆连接到放大器和记录单元进行,要么是动态监测。在动态监测中,脑电图记录仪便于携带但体积庞大,原则上,受试者在记录过程中可以正常进行日常生活。然而,在实际中,情况很少如此。进行动态脑电图监测的人通常会请假并待在家里,而不是戴着这样的设备出现在公共场合。可穿戴脑电图被设想为动态脑电图设备从如今笨重、使用寿命有限的设备发展而来,成为仅戴在头上的小型设备,能够一次记录数天、数周或数月的脑电图。这种小型化设备能够对癫痫等慢性病进行长期监测,并极大地提高终端用户对脑机接口系统的接受度。在本文中,我们旨在对可穿戴脑电图技术进行综述并概述,回答以下问题:它是什么,为什么需要它,以及它涉及什么?我们首先研究便携式脑电图系统的要求,然后将这些要求与可穿戴脑电图技术的核心应用联系起来:癫痫诊断、睡眠障碍诊断和脑机接口。作为我们综述的一部分,我们询问了21位神经科医生(作为关键用户群体)对可穿戴脑电图的看法。该群体强调可穿戴脑电图将是未来必不可少的工具。我们在此的描述将主要集中在癫痫以及可穿戴脑电图的医学应用上,因为这是脑电图的历史背景、我们的专业领域,并且其本身就是一个核心推动领域,但我们也将讨论其他应用领域。接着,我们考虑即将面临的研究挑战,主要是新的电极技术和低功耗电子学,并概述我们处理电子电源问题的方法。我们认为,实现可穿戴脑电图技术的最佳方法不是优化任何一个部分,而是在系统和实现层面找到最佳的权衡组合。在本文中,我们详细讨论其中两个权衡:研究脑电图数据的在线压缩以降低系统功耗,以及提供这种数据压缩的最佳方法。