Title :
A Brain–Machine Interface to Navigate a Mobile Robot in a Planar Workspace: Enabling Humans to Fly Simulated Aircraft With EEG
Author :
Akce, Abdullah ; Johnson, Mark ; Dantsker, O. ; Bretl, Timothy
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Comput. Sci., Univ. of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, IL, USA
Abstract :
This paper presents an interface for navigating a mobile robot that moves at a fixed speed in a planar workspace, with noisy binary inputs that are obtained asynchronously at low bit-rates from a human user through an electroencephalograph (EEG). The approach is to construct an ordered symbolic language for smooth planar curves and to use these curves as desired paths for a mobile robot. The underlying problem is then to design a communication protocol by which the user can, with vanishing error probability, specify a string in this language using a sequence of inputs. Such a protocol, provided by tools from information theory, relies on a human user´s ability to compare smooth curves, just like they can compare strings of text. We demonstrate our interface by performing experiments in which twenty subjects fly a simulated aircraft at a fixed speed and altitude with input only from EEG. Experimental results show that the majority of subjects are able to specify desired paths despite a wide range of errors made in decoding EEG signals.
Keywords :
autonomous aerial vehicles; brain-computer interfaces; computerised navigation; electroencephalography; error statistics; human-robot interaction; mobile robots; protocols; EEG; EEG signal decoding; bit rate; brain-machine interface; communication protocol; electroencephalograph; error probability; human user; human user ability; information theory; mobile robot navigation; noisy binary inputs; ordered symbolic language; planar workspace; simulated aircraft; smooth planar curves; Aircraft; Brain modeling; Electroencephalography; Humans; Mobile robots; Protocols; Brain–machine interface (BMI); information theory; robotics; semi-autonomous navigation; Aircraft; Algorithms; Brain Mapping; Electroencephalography; Humans; Imagination; Man-Machine Systems; Robotics; Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted; User-Computer Interface;
Journal_Title :
Neural Systems and Rehabilitation Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TNSRE.2012.2233757