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S. Hjelm and C. Browall. Brainball-Using brain activity for cool competition, In Proceedings of NordiCHI, 2000, pp. 177.

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Article

Emotion Detection from EEG signals with Continuous Wavelet Analyzing

1Instructor in University College of Roshdiyeh Group of Electronics Eng. Tabriz, Iran


American Journal of Computing Research Repository. 2014, Vol. 2 No. 4, 66-70
DOI: 10.12691/ajcrr-2-4-3
Copyright © 2014 Science and Education Publishing

Cite this paper:
Majid Memarian Sorkhabi. Emotion Detection from EEG signals with Continuous Wavelet Analyzing. American Journal of Computing Research Repository. 2014; 2(4):66-70. doi: 10.12691/ajcrr-2-4-3.

Correspondence to: Majid  Memarian Sorkhabi, Instructor in University College of Roshdiyeh Group of Electronics Eng. Tabriz, Iran. Email: memarian@tabrizu.ac.ir

Abstract

Recently, the field of Brain-Computer interface has gained a great deal of attention. In this work, we present some promising results of our research in classification of emotions induced by watching music videos. More specially, we aim to analyze users' passive physiological responses as they watch video clips. We use DEAP data base for this purpose. We show robust correlations between users’ self-assessments of arousal and valence and the frequency Entropy and powers of their EEG activity. Also we found that high frequency bands give higher accuracy than low frequency bands especially EEG in Gamma band that give accuracy at 73.84% (for valence) and 69.82% (for arousal). EEG signals were decomposed to 5 frequency bands by Continuous Wavelet Transform (CWT) using the 2.8 Biorthogonal wavelet.

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