Litcius/Paper detail

Confused or not: decoding brain activity and recognizing confusion in reasoning learning using EEG

Tao Xu, Jiabao Wang, Gaotian Zhang, Ling Zhang, Yun Zhou

2023Journal of Neural Engineering23 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Objective. Confusion is the primary epistemic emotion in the learning process, influencing students’ engagement and whether they become frustrated or bored. However, research on confusion in learning is still in its early stages, and there is a need to better understand how to recognize it and what electroencephalography (EEG) signals indicate its occurrence. The present work investigates confusion during reasoning learning using EEG, and aims to fill this gap with a multidisciplinary approach combining educational psychology, neuroscience and computer science. Approach. First, we design an experiment to actively and accurately induce confusion in reasoning. Second, we propose a subjective and objective joint labeling technique to address the label noise issue. Third, to confirm that the confused state can be distinguished from the non-confused state, we compare and analyze the mean band power of confused and unconfused states across five typical bands. Finally, we present an EEG database for confusion analysis, together with benchmark results from conventional (Naive Bayes, Support Vector Machine, Random Forest, and Artificial Neural Network) and end-to-end (Long Short Term Memory, Residual Network, and EEGNet) machine learning methods. Main results. Findings revealed: 1. Significant differences in the power of delta, theta, alpha, beta and lower gamma between confused and non-confused conditions; 2. A higher attentional and cognitive load when participants were confused; and 3. The Random Forest algorithm with time-domain features achieved a high accuracy/F1 score (88.06%/0.88 for the subject-dependent approach and 84.43%/0.84 for the subject-independent approach) in the binary classification of the confused and non-confused states. Significance. The study advances our understanding of confusion and provides practical insights for recognizing and analyzing it in the learning process. It extends existing theories on the differences between confused and non-confused states during learning and contributes to the cognitive-affective model. The research enables researchers, educators, and practitioners to monitor confusion, develop adaptive systems, and test recognition approaches.

Topics & Concepts

ElectroencephalographyComputer scienceArtificial intelligenceMachine learningRandom forestConfusionCognitionBenchmark (surveying)Support vector machineCognitive psychologyPsychologyNatural language processingGeographyNeurosciencePsychoanalysisGeodesyPsychiatryEEG and Brain-Computer InterfacesIntelligent Tutoring Systems and Adaptive LearningVisual and Cognitive Learning Processes
Confused or not: decoding brain activity and recognizing confusion in reasoning learning using EEG | Litcius