Researcher profile

Javier Andreu-Perez

Javier Andreu-Perez contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

5 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

Hypernetworks for Dynamic Feature Selection

Dynamic feature selection (DFS) is a machine learning framework in which features are acquired sequentially for individual samples under budget constraints. The exponential growth in the number of possible feature acquisition paths forces a DFS model to balance fitting specific scenarios against maintaining general performance, even when the feature space is moderate in size. In this paper, we study the structural limitations of existing DFS approaches to achieve an optimal solution. Then, we propose \textsc{Hyper-DFS}, a hypernetwork-based DFS approach that generates feature subset-specific classifier parameters on demand. We show that the use of hypernetworks compared to mask-embedding methods results in a smaller structural complexity bound. We also use a Set Transformer encoding to create a smooth conditioning space for the hypernetwork, so that functionally similar tasks are also geometrically close. In our benchmarks, \textsc{Hyper-DFS} outperforms all state-of-the-art approaches on synthetic and real-life tabular data. It is also competitive or superior across all image datasets tested, and shows substantially stronger zero-shot generalisation to feature subsets never seen during training than existing DFS approaches.

preprint2022arXiv

A Gentle Introduction and Survey on Computing with Words (CWW) Methodologies

Human beings have an inherent capability to use linguistic information (LI) seamlessly even though it is vague and imprecise. Computing with Words (CWW) was proposed to impart computing systems with this capability of human beings. The interest in the field of CWW is evident from a number of publications on various CWW methodologies. These methodologies use different ways to model the semantics of the LI. However, to the best of our knowledge, the literature on these methodologies is mostly scattered and does not give an interested researcher a comprehensive but gentle guide about the notion and utility of these methodologies. Hence, to introduce the foundations and state-of-the-art CWW methodologies, we provide a concise but a wide-ranging coverage of them in a simple and easy to understand manner. We feel that the simplicity with which we give a high-quality review and introduction to the CWW methodologies is very useful for investigators, especially those embarking on the use of CWW for the first time. We also provide future research directions to build upon for the interested and motivated researchers.

preprint2022arXiv

EEG-ITNet: An Explainable Inception Temporal Convolutional Network for Motor Imagery Classification

In recent years, neural networks and especially deep architectures have received substantial attention for EEG signal analysis in the field of brain-computer interfaces (BCIs). In this ongoing research area, the end-to-end models are more favoured than traditional approaches requiring signal transformation pre-classification. They can eliminate the need for prior information from experts and the extraction of handcrafted features. However, although several deep learning algorithms have been already proposed in the literature, achieving high accuracies for classifying motor movements or mental tasks, they often face a lack of interpretability and therefore are not quite favoured by the neuroscience community. The reasons behind this issue can be the high number of parameters and the sensitivity of deep neural networks to capture tiny yet unrelated discriminative features. We propose an end-to-end deep learning architecture called EEG-ITNet and a more comprehensible method to visualise the network learned patterns. Using inception modules and causal convolutions with dilation, our model can extract rich spectral, spatial, and temporal information from multi-channel EEG signals with less complexity (in terms of the number of trainable parameters) than other existing end-to-end architectures, such as EEG-Inception and EEG-TCNet. By an exhaustive evaluation on dataset 2a from BCI competition IV and OpenBMI motor imagery dataset, EEG-ITNet shows up to 5.9\% improvement in the classification accuracy in different scenarios with statistical significance compared to its competitors. We also comprehensively explain and support the validity of network illustration from a neuroscientific perspective. We have also made our code open at https://github.com/AbbasSalami/EEG-ITNet

preprint2022arXiv

Fuzzy temporal convolutional neural networks in P300-based Brain-computer interface for smart home interaction

The processing and classification of electroencephalographic signals (EEG) are increasingly performed using deep learning frameworks, such as convolutional neural networks (CNNs), to generate abstract features from brain data, automatically paving the way for remarkable classification prowess. However, EEG patterns exhibit high variability across time and uncertainty due to noise. It is a significant problem to be addressed in P300-based Brain Computer Interface (BCI) for smart home interaction. It operates in a non-optimal natural environment where added noise is often present. In this work, we propose a sequential unification of temporal convolutional networks (TCNs) modified to EEG signals, LSTM cells, with a fuzzy neural block (FNB), which we called EEG-TCFNet. Fuzzy components may enable a higher tolerance to noisy conditions. We applied three different architectures comparing the effect of using block FNB to classify a P300 wave to build a BCI for smart home interaction with healthy and post-stroke individuals. Our results reported a maximum classification accuracy of 98.6% and 74.3% using the proposed method of EEG-TCFNet in subject-dependent strategy and subject-independent strategy, respectively. Overall, FNB usage in all three CNN topologies outperformed those without FNB. In addition, we compared the addition of FNB to other state-of-the-art methods and obtained higher classification accuracies on account of the integration with FNB. The remarkable performance of the proposed model, EEG-TCFNet, and the general integration of fuzzy units to other classifiers would pave the way for enhanced P300-based BCIs for smart home interaction within natural settings.

preprint2018arXiv

Artificial Intelligence and Robotics

The recent successes of AI have captured the wildest imagination of both the scientific communities and the general public. Robotics and AI amplify human potentials, increase productivity and are moving from simple reasoning towards human-like cognitive abilities. Current AI technologies are used in a set area of applications, ranging from healthcare, manufacturing, transport, energy, to financial services, banking, advertising, management consulting and government agencies. The global AI market is around 260 billion USD in 2016 and it is estimated to exceed 3 trillion by 2024. To understand the impact of AI, it is important to draw lessons from it's past successes and failures and this white paper provides a comprehensive explanation of the evolution of AI, its current status and future directions.