Abstract
The automated feature extraction capabilities of deep learning classifiers have promoted their broader application to EEG analysis. In contrast to earlier machine learning studies that used extracted features and traditional explainability approaches, explainability for classifiers trained on raw data is particularly challenging. As such, studies have begun to present methods that provide insight into the spectral features learned by deep learning classifiers trained on raw EEG. These approaches have two key shortcomings. (1) They involve perturbation, which can create out-of-distribution samples that cause inaccurate explanations. (2) They are global, not local. Local explainability approaches can be used to examine how demographic and clinical variables affected the patterns learned by the classifier. In our study, we present a novel local spectral explainability approach. We apply it to a convolutional neural network trained for automated sleep stage classification. We apply layer-wise relevance propagation to identify the relative importance of the features in the raw EEG and subsequently examine the frequency domain of the explanations to determine the importance of each canonical frequency band locally and globally. We then perform a statistical analysis to determine whether age and sex affected the patterns learned by the classifier for each frequency band and sleep stage. Results showed that δ, β, and γ were the overall most important frequency bands. In addition, age and sex significantly affected the patterns learned by the classifier for most sleep stages and frequency bands. Our study presents a novel spectral explainability approach that could substantially increase the level of insight into classifiers trained on raw EEG.
Competing Interest Statement
The authors have declared no competing interest.
Footnotes
Funding for this work is from NIH grant R01EB006841
mseslampanah{at}gatech.edu
robyn.l.miller{at}gmail.com
vcalhoun{at}gsu.edu
added funding source for work