PRISM: Exploring Heterogeneous Pretrained EEG Foundation Model Transfer to Clinical Differential Diagnosis
Jeet Bandhu Lahiri, Parshva Runwal, Arvasu Kulkarni, Mahir Jain, Aditya Ray Mishra, Siddharth Panwar, Sandeep Singh

TL;DR
PRISM introduces a versatile EEG foundation model trained on diverse datasets, demonstrating improved adaptability and clinical diagnostic performance, while highlighting the importance of dataset diversity and evaluation consistency.
Contribution
This work presents PRISM, a new EEG foundation model trained on diverse datasets, showing that targeted diversity enhances clinical task performance and model robustness.
Findings
Diverse pretraining improves adaptability under fine-tuning.
PRISM outperforms REVE on most tasks with fewer datasets.
Dataset diversity and evaluation protocols significantly impact model rankings.
Abstract
EEG foundation models are typically pretrained on narrow-source clinical archives and evaluated on benchmarks from the same ecosystem, leaving unclear whether representations encode neural physiology or recording-distribution artifacts. We introduce PRISM (Population Representative Invariant Signal Model), a masked autoencoder ablated along two axes -- pretraining population and downstream adaptation -- with architecture and preprocessing fixed. We compare a narrow-source EU/US corpus (TUH + PhysioNet) against a geographically diverse pool augmented with multi-center South Asian clinical recordings across multiple EEG systems. Three findings emerge. First, narrow-source pretraining yields stronger linear probes on distribution-matched benchmarks, while diverse pretraining produces more adaptable representations under fine-tuning -- a trade-off invisible under single-protocol evaluation.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEEG and Brain-Computer Interfaces · Functional Brain Connectivity Studies · Epilepsy research and treatment
