Title :
A Stochastic Control Approach to Optimally Designing Hierarchical Flash Sets in P300 Communication Prostheses
Author :
Ma, Rui ; Aghasadeghi, Navid ; Jarzebowski, Julian ; Bretl, Timothy ; Coleman, Todd P.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Bioeng., Univ. of California-San Diego, La Jolla, CA, USA
Abstract :
The P300-based speller is a well-established brain-computer interface for communication. It displays a matrix of objects on the computer screen, flashes each object in sequence, and looks for a P300 response induced by flashing the desired object. Most existing P300 spellers uses a fixed set of flash objects. We demonstrate that performance can be significantly improved by sequential selections from a hierarchy of flash sets containing variable number of objects. Theoretically, the optimal hierarchy of flash sets - with respect to a given statistical language model - can be found by solving a stochastic control problem of low computational complexity. Experimentally, statistical analysis demonstrates that the average time per output character at 85% accuracy is reduced by over 50% using our variable-flash-set approach as compared to traditional fixed-flash-set spellers.
Keywords :
bioelectric potentials; electroencephalography; handicapped aids; medical control systems; medical signal processing; prosthetics; statistical analysis; stochastic processes; P300 communication prostheses; P300-based speller; brain-computer interface; fixed flash set spellers; hierarchical flash sets; statistical analysis; statistical language model; stochastic control; variable flash set approach; Ash; Computers; Delay; Dynamic programming; Electronic mail; Lighting; Stochastic processes; Brain–computer interfaces (BCIs); P300; hierarchical flash sets; stochastic dynamic programming; Adolescent; Adult; Algorithms; Brain; Data Interpretation, Statistical; Event-Related Potentials, P300; Female; Humans; Male; Models, Statistical; Photic Stimulation; Reproducibility of Results; Software; Stochastic Processes; User-Computer Interface; Young Adult;
Journal_Title :
Neural Systems and Rehabilitation Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TNSRE.2011.2179560