DARE-EEG is a self-supervised EEG foundation model that enforces mask-invariance via contrastive mask alignment and momentum anchor alignment, plus conv-linear-probing for heterogeneous setups, achieving SOTA accuracy and cross-dataset portability.
Analysis of a sleep- dependent neuronal feedback loop: the slow-wave microcontinuity of the EEG
4 Pith papers cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.
citation-role summary
citation-polarity summary
years
2026 4verdicts
UNVERDICTED 4representative citing papers
MuteBench evaluates multimodal fusion robustness to modality missing and within-modality missing on 125000 samples from 9 clinical datasets, finding architecture family predicts tolerance better than parameter count.
ADAPT is a new pre-training paradigm that aligns physical properties of time-series data to allow simultaneous training on 162 diverse classification datasets, achieving new state-of-the-art performance.
A review synthesizes evidence from EEG, EMG, ECG, PPG and ocular signals to argue that waveform morphology, rather than modality or model class, primarily determines TSC performance and interpretability.
citing papers explorer
-
DARE-EEG: A Foundation Model for Mining Dual-Aligned Representation of EEG
DARE-EEG is a self-supervised EEG foundation model that enforces mask-invariance via contrastive mask alignment and momentum anchor alignment, plus conv-linear-probing for heterogeneous setups, achieving SOTA accuracy and cross-dataset portability.
-
MuteBench: Modality Unavailability Tolerance Evaluation for Incomplete Multimodal Fusion
MuteBench evaluates multimodal fusion robustness to modality missing and within-modality missing on 125000 samples from 9 clinical datasets, finding architecture family predicts tolerance better than parameter count.
-
ADAPTive Input Training for Many-to-One Pre-Training on Time-Series Classification
ADAPT is a new pre-training paradigm that aligns physical properties of time-series data to allow simultaneous training on 162 diverse classification datasets, achieving new state-of-the-art performance.
-
Modality vs. Morphology: A Framework for Time Series Classification for Biological Signals
A review synthesizes evidence from EEG, EMG, ECG, PPG and ocular signals to argue that waveform morphology, rather than modality or model class, primarily determines TSC performance and interpretability.