DocumentCode :
636916
Title :
A clinical study of motor imagery BCI performance in stroke by including calibration data from passive movement
Author :
Kai Keng Ang ; Cuntai Guan ; Chua, Karen Sui Geok ; Kok Soon Phua ; Chuanchu Wang ; Zheng Yang Chin ; Longjiang Zhou ; Ka Yin Tang ; Joseph, Gopal Joseph Ephraim ; Kuah, Christopher
Author_Institution :
Inst. for Infocomm Res., Agency for Sci., Technol. & Res. (A*STAR), Singapore, Singapore
fYear :
2013
fDate :
3-7 July 2013
Firstpage :
6603
Lastpage :
6606
Abstract :
Electroencephalogram (EEG) data from performing motor imagery are usually used to calibrate a subject-specific model in Motor Imagery Brain-Computer Interface (MI-BCI). However, the performance of MI is not directly observable by another person. Studies that attempted to address this issue in order to improve subjects with low MI performance had shown that it is feasible to use calibration data from Passive Movement (PM) to detect MI in healthy subjects. This study investigates the feasibility of using calibration data from PM of stroke patients to detect MI. EEG data from 2 calibration runs of MI and PM by a robotic haptic knob, and 1 evaluation run of MI were collected in one session of recording from 34 hemiparetic stroke patients recruited in the clinical study. In each run, 40 trials of MI or PM and 40 trials of the background rest were collected. The off-line run-to-run transfer kappa values from the calibration runs of MI, PM, and combined MI and PM, to the evaluation run of MI were then evaluated and compared. The results showed that calibration using PM (0.392) yielded significantly lower kappa value than the calibration using MI (0.457, p=4.40e-14). The results may be due to a significant disparity between the EEG data from PM and MI in stroke subjects. Nevertheless, the results showed that the calibration using both MI and PM (0.506) yielded significantly higher kappa value than the calibration using MI (0.457, p=9.54e-14). Hence, the results of this study suggest a promising direction to combine calibration data from PM and MI to improve MI detection on stroke.
Keywords :
brain-computer interfaces; calibration; diseases; electroencephalography; medical robotics; medical signal detection; medical signal processing; patient rehabilitation; physiological models; EEG data disparity; MI calibration; MI detection; MI performance; MI-BCI; MI-PM combination calibration; PM calibration; calibration data; clinical study; electroencephalogram data; healthy subject; hemiparetic stroke patient; motor imagery BCI performance; motor imagery brain-computer interface; off-line run-to-run transfer kappa value; passive movement; robotic haptic knob; stroke patient PM; subject-specific model calibration; Accuracy; Brain modeling; Calibration; Data models; Electroencephalography; Haptic interfaces; Robots; Adult; Aged; Brain-Computer Interfaces; Calibration; Diagnostic Imaging; Electroencephalography; Female; Humans; Male; Middle Aged; Paresis; Stroke;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society (EMBC), 2013 35th Annual International Conference of the IEEE
Conference_Location :
Osaka
ISSN :
1557-170X
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/EMBC.2013.6611069
Filename :
6611069
Link To Document :
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