After much anticipation the Melbourne-University AES-MathWorks-NIH Seizure 
Prediction Challenge has launched on Kaggle.com!

Enter for your chance to win part of the US$20,000 prize pool and test your 
data science skills against the one-of-a-kind long-term human intracranial EEG 
database from the world-first human clinical trial of the NeuroVista Seizure 
Advisory System that was co-ordinated by the University of Melbourne. This 
device was implanted in the heads of epilepsy patients to record brain activity 
over a period of 6 months to 3 years. Typical recordings of intracranial EEG in 
humans only last up to two weeks and do not provide enough data to allow 
accurate evaluation of seizure prediction algorithms because often only a 
handful of seizures can be collected over two weeks. The durations of data in 
the NeuroVista dataset overcome this problem.

Analysis of the human NeuroVista dataset has indicated that seizure prediction 
in humans is in fact possible, however, improvements can still be achieved 
depending on the patient. This contest seeks to find improved methods by 
contributing data from 3 patients whose seizures are difficult to predict.

In 2014, our contest partners from the Mayo Clinic and University of 
Pennsylvania ran a seizure prediction contest on Kaggle.com involving long-term 
data from dogs, that were also implanted with the NeuroVista device, and 
short-term human data. The contest revealed several novel and existing 
approaches that performed well and now we want to know how well they can 
perform on long-term data from humans. Can you help us find out, or can you 
come up with even better algorithms?

Everything you need to get started is on the contest web page:

https://www.kaggle.com/c/melbourne-university-seizure-prediction

Be sure to get started soon as the contest ends on November 21 and the winners 
will be announced at the American Epilepsy Society Annual Meeting on December 5.

Good luck!

On behalf of the organising team
University of Melbourne: Levin Kuhlmann, Mark Cook, David Grayden, Dean 
Freestone, Philippa Karoly
University of Pennsylvania: Brian Litt
Mayo Clinic: Greg Worrell, Ben Brinkmann
Alliance for Epilepsy Research: Susan Arthurs
And our co-sponsors
American Epilepsy Society
MathWorks
National Institutes of Health
And Kaggle.com

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