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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Shared and Unshared Feature Extraction in Major Depression During Music Listening Using Constrained Tensor Factorization

Xiulin WangXiulin WangWenya LiuWenya LiuXiaoyu WangZhen MuJing XuYi ChangQing ZhangJianlin WuFengyu CongFengyu CongFengyu CongFengyu Cong

subject

masennusmajor depressive disordersignaalinkäsittelymusiikkinaturalistic music stimulisignaalianalyysiNeurosciences. Biological psychiatry. NeuropsychiatryHuman Neuroscienceconstrained tensor factorizationbehavioral disciplines and activitiesBehavioral NeurosciencePsychiatry and Mental healthNeuropsychology and Physiological PsychologyNeurologyCANDECOMP/PARAFACaivotutkimusEEGärsykkeetBiological PsychiatryRC321-571Original Research

description

Ongoing electroencephalography (EEG) signals are recorded as a mixture of stimulus-elicited EEG, spontaneous EEG and noises, which poses a huge challenge to current data analyzing techniques, especially when different groups of participants are expected to have common or highly correlated brain activities and some individual dynamics. In this study, we proposed a data-driven shared and unshared feature extraction framework based on nonnegative and coupled tensor factorization, which aims to conduct group-level analysis for the EEG signals from major depression disorder (MDD) patients and healthy controls (HC) when freely listening to music. Constrained tensor factorization not only preserves the multilinear structure of the data, but also considers the common and individual components between the data. The proposed framework, combined with music information retrieval, correlation analysis, and hierarchical clustering, facilitated the simultaneous extraction of shared and unshared spatio-temporal-spectral feature patterns between/in MDD and HC groups. Finally, we obtained two shared feature patterns between MDD and HC groups, and obtained totally three individual feature patterns from HC and MDD groups. The results showed that the MDD and HC groups triggered similar brain dynamics when listening to music, but at the same time, MDD patients also brought some changes in brain oscillatory network characteristics along with music perception. These changes may provide some basis for the clinical diagnosis and the treatment of MDD patients.

https://doi.org/10.3389/fnhum.2021.799288