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Physiological interference reduction for near infrared spectroscopy brain activity measurement based on recursive least squares adaptive filtering and least squares support vector machines

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Near infrared spectroscopy is the promising and noninvasive technique that can be used to detect the brain functional activation by monitoring the concentration alternations in the haemodynamic concentration. The acquired NIRS signals are commonly contaminated by physiological interference caused by breathing and cardiac contraction. Though the adaptive filtering method with least mean squares algorithm or recursive least squares algorithm based on multidistance probe configuration could improve the quality of evoked brain activity response, both methods can only remove the physiological interference occurred in superficial layers of the head tissue. To overcome the shortcoming, we combined the recursive least squares adaptive filtering method with the least squares support vector machine to suppress physiological interference both in the superficial layers and deeper layers of the head tissue. The quantified results based on performance measures suggest that the estimation performances of the proposed method for the evoked haemodynamic changes are better than the traditional recursive least squares method.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)160-166
Number of pages7
JournalComputer Assisted Surgery
Volume24
Issue numbersup1
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Oct 2019
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Near infrared spectroscopy
  • adaptive filtering
  • least squares support vector machine
  • physiological interference
  • recursive least squares

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