• Journal of Innovative Optical Health Sciences
  • Vol. 6, Issue 4, 1350035 (2013)
MEHDI AMIAN* and S. KAMALEDIN SETAREHDAN
Author Affiliations
  • Control and Intelligent Processing Centre of Excellence School of Electrical and Computer Engineering, College of Engineering University of Tehran, Tehran, Iran
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    DOI: 10.1142/s1793545813500351 Cite this Article
    MEHDI AMIAN, S. KAMALEDIN SETAREHDAN. MOTION ARTIFACT REDUCTION IN FUNCTIONAL NEAR INFRARED SPECTROSCOPY SIGNALS BY AUTOREGRESSIVE MOVING AVERAGE MODELING BASED KALMAN FILTERING[J]. Journal of Innovative Optical Health Sciences, 2013, 6(4): 1350035 Copy Citation Text show less

    Abstract

    Functional near infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS) is a technique that is used for noninvasive measurement of the oxyhemoglobin (HbO2) and deoxyhemoglobin (HHb) concentrations in the brain tissue. Since the ratio of the concentration of these two agents is correlated with the neuronal activity, fNIRS can be used for the monitoring and quantifying the cortical activity. The portability of fNIRS makes it a good candidate for studies involving subject's movement. The fNIRS measurements, however, are sensitive to artifacts generated by subject's head motion. This makes fNIRS signals less effective in such applications. In this paper, the autoregressive moving average (ARMA) modeling of the fNIRS signal is proposed for state-space representation of the signal which is then fed to the Kalman filter for estimating the motionless signal from motion corrupted signal. Results are compared to the autoregressive model (AR) based approach, which has been done previously, and show that the ARMA models outperform AR models. We attribute it to the richer structure, containing more terms indeed, of ARMA than AR. We show that the signal to noise ratio (SNR) is about 2 dB higher for ARMA based method.
    MEHDI AMIAN, S. KAMALEDIN SETAREHDAN. MOTION ARTIFACT REDUCTION IN FUNCTIONAL NEAR INFRARED SPECTROSCOPY SIGNALS BY AUTOREGRESSIVE MOVING AVERAGE MODELING BASED KALMAN FILTERING[J]. Journal of Innovative Optical Health Sciences, 2013, 6(4): 1350035
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