JOURNAL ARTICLE
RESEARCH SUPPORT, NON-U.S. GOV'T
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Detecting bursts in the EEG of very and extremely premature infants using a multi-feature approach.

AIM: To develop a method that segments preterm EEG into bursts and inter-bursts by extracting and combining multiple EEG features.

METHODS: Two EEG experts annotated bursts in individual EEG channels for 36 preterm infants with gestational age < 30 weeks. The feature set included spectral, amplitude, and frequency-weighted energy features. Using a consensus annotation, feature selection removed redundant features and a support vector machine combined features. Area under the receiver operator characteristic (AUC) and Cohen's kappa (κ) evaluated performance within a cross-validation procedure.

RESULTS: The proposed channel-independent method improves AUC by 4-5% over existing methods (p < 0.001, n=36), with median (95% confidence interval) AUC of 0.989 (0.973-0.997) and sensitivity-specificity of 95.8-94.4%. Agreement rates between the detector and experts' annotations, κ=0.72 (0.36-0.83) and κ=0.65 (0.32-0.81), are comparable to inter-rater agreement, κ=0.60 (0.21-0.74).

CONCLUSIONS: Automating the visual identification of bursts in preterm EEG is achievable with a high level of accuracy. Multiple features, combined using a data-driven approach, improves on existing single-feature methods.

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