In-Ear SpO2 for Classification of Cognitive Workload

IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON COGNITIVE AND DEVELOPMENTAL SYSTEMS(2023)

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Abstract
The brain is the most metabolically active organ in the body, which increases its metabolic activity and, thus, oxygen consumption, with increasing cognitive demand. This motivates us to question whether the increased cognitive workload may be measurable through changes in blood oxygen saturation. To this end, we explore the feasibility of cognitive workload tracking based on in-ear SpO(2) measurements, which are known to be both robust and exhibit minimal delay. We consider a cognitive workload assessment based on an N-back task with a randomized order. It is shown that the 2-back and 3-back tasks (high cognitive workload) yield either the lowest median absolute SpO(2) or largest median decrease in SpO(2) in all of the subjects, indicating a measurable and statistically significant decrease in blood oxygen in response to the increased cognitive workload. This makes it possible to classify the four N-back task categories, over 5-s epochs, with a mean accuracy of 90.6%, using features derived from in-ear pulse oximetry, including SpO(2), pulse rate, and respiration rate. These findings suggest that in-ear SpO(2) measurements provide sufficient information for the reliable classification of cognitive workload over short time windows, which promises a new avenue for real-time cognitive workload tracking.
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Index Terms-Biomedical engineering,biomedical signal pro-cessing,brain-computer interfaces,cognitive processes,pho-toplethysmography,pulse oximeter,random forests,wearable health monitoring systems
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