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Abstract

The rapid development of wearable biomedical systems now enables real-time monitoring of electroencephalography (EEG) signals. Acquisition of these signals relies on electrodes. These systems must meet the design challenge of selecting an optimal set of electrodes that balances performance and usability constraints. The search for the optimal subset of electrodes from a larger set is a problem with combinatorial complexity. While existing research has primarily focused on search strategies that only explore limited combinations, our methodology proposes a computationally efficient way to explore all combinations. To avoid the computational burden associated with training the model for each combination, we leverage an innovative approach inspired by few-shot learning. Remarkably, this strategy covers all the wearable electrode combinations while significantly reducing training time compared to retraining the network on each possible combination. In the context of an epileptic seizure detection task, the proposed method achieves an AUC value of 0.917 with configurations using eight electrodes. This performance matches that of prior research but is achieved in significantly less time, transforming a process that would span months into a matter of hours on a single GPU device. Our work allows comprehensive exploration of electrode configurations in wearable biomedical device design, yielding insights that enhance performance and real-world feasibility.

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