4.5 Article

Fast set-up asynchronous brain-switch based on detection of foot motor imagery in 1-channel EEG

Journal

MEDICAL & BIOLOGICAL ENGINEERING & COMPUTING
Volume 48, Issue 3, Pages 229-233

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s11517-009-0572-7

Keywords

Brain-Computer Interface; Electroencephalogram; Motor execution; Motor imagery; Brain-switch

Funding

  1. Lorenz-Boehler Gesellschaft
  2. Allgemeine Unfallversicherungsanstalt (AUVA)
  3. Wings for Life-Spinal Cord Research Foundation
  4. EU [IST-2006-27731]

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Bringing a Brain-Computer Interface (BCI) out of the lab one of the main problems has to be solved: to shorten the training time. Finding a solution for this problem, the use of a BCI will be open not only for people who have no choice, e. g., persons in a locked-in state, or suffering from a degenerating nerve disease. By reducing the training time to a minimum, also healthy persons will make use of the system, e. g., for using this kind of control for games. For realizing such a control, the post-movement beta rebound occurring after brisk feet movement was used to set up a classifier. This classifier was then used in a cue-based motor imagery system. After classifier adaptation, a self-paced brain-switch based on brisk foot motor imagery (MI) was evaluated. Four out of six subjects showed that a post-movement beta rebound after feet MI and succeeded with a true positive rate between 69 and 89%, while the positive predictive value was between 75 and 93%.

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