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Statistica Sinica 18(2008), 1535-1551





PENALIZED LEAST SQUARES METHODS FOR

SOLVING THE EEG INVERSE PROBLEM


Mayrim Vega-Hernández, Eduardo Martínez-Montes,
José M. Sánchez-Bornot, Agustín Lage-Castellanos
and Pedro A. Valdés-Sosa


Cuban Neuroscience Center
Abstract: Most of the known solutions (linear and nonlinear) of the ill-posed EEG Inverse Problem can be interpreted as the estimated coefficients in a penalized regression framework. In this work we present a general formulation of this problem as a Multiple Penalized Least Squares model, which encompasses many of the previously known methods as particular cases (e.g., Minimum Norm, LORETA). New types of inverse solutions arise since recent advances in the field of penalized regression have made it possible to deal with non-convex penalty functions, which provide sparse solutions (Fan and Li (2001)). Moreover, a generalization of this approach allows the use of any combination of penalties based on $l1$ or $l2$-norms, leading to solutions with combined properties such as smoothness and sparsity. Synthetic data is used to explore the benefits of non-convex penalty functions (e.g., LASSO, SCAD and LASSO Fusion) and mixtures (e.g., Elastic Net and LASSO Fused) by comparing them with known solutions in terms of localization error, blurring and visibility. Real data is used to show that a mixture model (Elastic Net) allows for tuning the spatial resolution of the solution to range from very concentrated to very blurred sources.



Key words and phrases: EEG, inverse problem, least squares, penalized regression.

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