DocumentCode
718238
Title
Bringing BCI into everyday life: Motor imagery in a pseudo realistic environment
Author
Brandl, Stephanie ; Hohne, Johannes ; Muller, Klaus-Robert ; Samek, Wojciech
Author_Institution
Berlin Inst. of Technol., Berlin, Germany
fYear
2015
fDate
22-24 April 2015
Firstpage
224
Lastpage
227
Abstract
Bringing Brain-Computer Interfaces (BCIs) into everyday life is a challenge because an out-of-lab environment implies the presence of variables that are largely beyond control of the user and the software application. This can severely corrupt signal quality as well as reliability of BCI control. Current BCI technology may fail in this application scenario because of the large amounts of noise, nonstationarity and movement artifacts. In this paper, we systematically investigate the performance of motor imagery BCI in a pseudo realistic environment. In our study 16 participants were asked to perform motor imagery tasks while dealing with different types of distractions such as vibratory stimulations or listening tasks. Our experiments demonstrate that standard BCI procedures are not robust to theses additional sources of noise, implicating that methods which work well in a lab environment, may perform poorly in realistic application scenarios. We discuss several promising research directions to tackle this important problem.
Keywords
brain-computer interfaces; medical computing; neurophysiology; BCI; brain-computer interfaces; listening tasks; motor imagery; pseudorealistic environment; vibratory stimulations; Accuracy; Brain-computer interfaces; Calibration; Feature extraction; Noise; Robustness; Visualization;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Neural Engineering (NER), 2015 7th International IEEE/EMBS Conference on
Conference_Location
Montpellier
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/NER.2015.7146600
Filename
7146600
Link To Document