We investigated which evoked response component occurring in the first 800 ms after stimulus presentation was most suitable to be used in a classical P300-based brain-computer interface speller protocol. Data was acquired from 275 Magnetoencephalographic sensors in two subjects and from 61 Electroencephalographic sensors in four. To better characterize the evoked physiological responses and minimize the effect of response overlap, a 1000 ms Inter Stimulus Interval was preferred to the short (<400 ms) trial length traditionally used in this class of BCIs. To investigate which scalp regions conveyed information suitable for BCI, a stepwise linear discriminant analysis classifier was used. The method iteratively analyzed each individual sensor and determined its performance indicators. These were then plotted on a 2-D topographic head map. Preliminary results for both EEG and MEG data suggest that components other than the P300 maximally represented in the occipital region, could be successfully used to improve classification accuracy and finally drive this class of BCIs.

Bianchi, L., Sami, S., Hillebrand, A., Fawcett, I., Quitadamo, L., Seri, S. (2010). Which physiological components are more suitable for visual ERP based brain-computer interface? A preliminary MEG/EEG study. BRAIN TOPOGRAPHY, 23(2), 180-185 [10.1007/s10548-010-0143-0].

Which physiological components are more suitable for visual ERP based brain-computer interface? A preliminary MEG/EEG study

BIANCHI, LUIGI;
2010-06-01

Abstract

We investigated which evoked response component occurring in the first 800 ms after stimulus presentation was most suitable to be used in a classical P300-based brain-computer interface speller protocol. Data was acquired from 275 Magnetoencephalographic sensors in two subjects and from 61 Electroencephalographic sensors in four. To better characterize the evoked physiological responses and minimize the effect of response overlap, a 1000 ms Inter Stimulus Interval was preferred to the short (<400 ms) trial length traditionally used in this class of BCIs. To investigate which scalp regions conveyed information suitable for BCI, a stepwise linear discriminant analysis classifier was used. The method iteratively analyzed each individual sensor and determined its performance indicators. These were then plotted on a 2-D topographic head map. Preliminary results for both EEG and MEG data suggest that components other than the P300 maximally represented in the occipital region, could be successfully used to improve classification accuracy and finally drive this class of BCIs.
giu-2010
Pubblicato
Rilevanza internazionale
Articolo
Sì, ma tipo non specificato
Settore MED/26 - NEUROLOGIA
English
Con Impact Factor ISI
signal processing, computer-assisted; writing; discriminant analysis; male; linear models; middle aged; female; models, neurological; magnetoencephalography; humans; electroencephalography; evoked potentials; user-computer interface; event-related potentials, P300; brain; brain mapping; adult; scalp; occipital lobe
Bianchi, L., Sami, S., Hillebrand, A., Fawcett, I., Quitadamo, L., Seri, S. (2010). Which physiological components are more suitable for visual ERP based brain-computer interface? A preliminary MEG/EEG study. BRAIN TOPOGRAPHY, 23(2), 180-185 [10.1007/s10548-010-0143-0].
Bianchi, L; Sami, S; Hillebrand, A; Fawcett, I; Quitadamo, L; Seri, S
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2108/43296
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