Retrieving the structure of probabilistic sequences of auditory stimuli from EEG data

01/30/2020
by   Noslen Hernández, et al.
0

Using a new probabilistic approach we model the relationship between sequences of auditory stimuli generated by stochastic chains and the electroencephalographic (EEG) data acquired while participants are exposed to those stimuli. Herein, the structure of the chain generating the stimuli is characterized by a rooted and labeled tree whose branches, henceforth called contexts, represent the sequences of past stimuli governing the choice of the next stimulus. A classical conjecture claims that the brain assigns probabilistic models to samples of stimuli. If this is true, then the context tree generating the sequence of stimuli should be encoded in the brain activity. Using an innovative statistical procedure we show that this context tree can effectively be extracted from the EEG data, thus giving support to the classical conjecture.

READ FULL TEXT
research
12/22/2017

Music of Brain and Music on Brain: A Novel EEG Sonification approach

Can we hear the sound of our brain? Is there any technique which can ena...
research
09/08/2020

SeqROCTM: A Matlab toolbox for the analysis of Sequence of Random Objects driven by Context Tree Models

In several research problems we deal with probabilistic sequences of inp...
research
12/18/2018

Training on the test set? An analysis of Spampinato et al. [31]

A recent paper [31] claims to classify brain processing evoked in subjec...
research
02/28/2023

Probabilistic prediction and context tree identification in the Goalkeeper Game

In this article we address two related issues on the learning of probabi...
research
06/06/2023

Computation with Sequences in the Brain

Even as machine learning exceeds human-level performance on many applica...
research
03/10/2018

Dealing with Unknown Unknowns: Identification and Selection of Minimal Sensing for Fractional Dynamics with Unknown Inputs

This paper focuses on analysis and design of time-varying complex networ...
research
04/30/2020

The unconscious priming fallacy: When can scientists truly claim an indirect task advantage?

Current literature holds that many cognitive functions can be performed ...

Please sign up or login with your details

Forgot password? Click here to reset