Aligning Shared and Routed Experts for Cross-Subject EEG Generalization
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Cross-subject EEG generalization is challenging due to substantial heterogeneity across subjects. Existing methods typically learn either a shared subject-invariant model or multiple subject-specialized experts, but these two paradigms fail in complementary ways: the former may over-reduce subject-specific discriminative signals, while the latter may under-reduce transferable structure. We show that their suitability depends on the reducibility cost of branch-specific functions to branch-invariant ones, and we further provide a theory-to-method mapping that instantiates alignment principles in cross-subject EEG learning. Based on this insight, we propose Shared-Routed Expert Alignment (SREA), a collaborative framework that couples a shared expert for reducible invariant functions with routed experts for irreducible subject-specific functions. SREA trains the shared branch with joint embedding over augmented temporal neighbors, the routed branch with prototype-based sparse routing and expert specialization, and both branches with numerically stable mutual-guided reweighting based on cross-branch learnability gaps. Experiments on seven public EEG benchmarks across different tasks show that SREA consistently outperforms state-of-the-art methods and EEG foundation models.
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