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EpiDeNet: An Energy-Efficient Approach to Seizure Detection for Embedded Systems

Thorir Mar Ingolfsson, Upasana Chakraborty, Xiaying Wang, Sándor Beniczky, Pauline Ducouret, Simone Benatti, Philippe Ryvlin, Andrea Cossettini, Luca Benini

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Abstract

Epilepsy is a prevalent neurological disorder that affects millions of individuals globally, and continuous monitoring coupled with automated seizure detection appears as a necessity for effective patient treatment. To enable long-term care in daily-life conditions, comfortable and smart wearable devices with long battery life are required, which in turn set the demand for resource-constrained and energy-efficient computing solutions. In this context, the development of machine learning algorithms for seizure detection faces the challenge of heavily imbalanced datasets. This paper introduces EpiDeNet, a new lightweight seizure detection network, and Sensitivity-Specificity Weighted Cross-Entropy (SSWCE), a new loss function that incorporates sensitivity and specificity, to address the challenge of heavily unbalanced datasets. The proposed EpiDeNet-SSWCE approach demonstrates the successful detection of 91.16% and 92.00% seizure events on two different datasets (CHB-MIT and PEDESITE, respectively), with only four EEG channels. A three-window majority voting-based smoothing scheme combined with the SSWCE loss achieves 3× reduction of false positives to 1.18 FP/h. EpiDeNet is well suited for implementation on low-power embedded platforms, and we evaluate its performance on two ARM Cortex-based platforms (M4F/M7) and two parallel ultra-low power (PULP) systems (GAP8, GAP9). The most efficient implementation (GAP9) achieves an energy efficiency of 40 GMAC/s/W, with an energy consumption per inference of only 0.051 mJ at high performance (726.46 MMAC/s), outperforming the best ARM Cortex-based solutions by approximately 160× in energy efficiency. The EpiDeNet-SSWCE method demonstrates effective and accurate seizure detection performance on heavily imbalanced datasets, while being suited for implementation on energy-constrained platforms.

Topics & Concepts

Computer scienceFalse positive paradoxContext (archaeology)Wearable computerEfficient energy useWearable technologyArtificial intelligenceMachine learningReal-time computingEmbedded systemEngineeringPaleontologyBiologyElectrical engineeringEEG and Brain-Computer InterfacesEpilepsy research and treatmentBlind Source Separation Techniques
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