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Zhaolin YAO Xinyao MA Yijun WANG Xu ZHANG Ming LIU Weihua PEI Hongda CHEN
A new hybrid brain-computer interface (BCI), which is based on sequential controls by eye tracking and steady-state visual evoked potentials (SSVEPs), has been proposed for high-speed spelling in virtual reality (VR) with a 40-target virtual keyboard. During target selection, gaze point was first detected by an eye-tracking accessory. A 4-target block was then selected for further target selection by a 4-class SSVEP BCI. The system can type at a speed of 1.25 character/sec in a cue-guided target selection task. Online experiments on three subjects achieved an averaged information transfer rate (ITR) of 360.7 bits/min.
Rustu Murat DEMIRER Yukio KOSUGI Halil Ozcan GULCUR
This paper investigates the modeling of non-linearity on the generation of the single trial evoked potential signal (s-EP) by means of using a mixed radial basis function neural network (M-RBFN). The more emphasis is put on the contribution of spontaneous EEG term to s-EP signal. The method is based on a nonlinear M-RBFN neural network model that is trained simultaneously with the different segments of EEG/EP data. Then, the output of the trained model (estimator) is a both fitted and reduced (optimized) nonlinear model and then provide a global representation of the passage dynamics between spontaneous brain activity and poststimulus periods. The performance of the proposed neural network method is evaluated using a realistic simulation and applied to a real EEG/EP measurement.
Kazumi ODAKA Toshiaki IMADA Takunori MASHIKO Minoru HAYASHI
This letter shows that a portable visual stimulator for MEG measurements can be realized using an optical fiber bundle and a CRT display system offering high brightness and high speed raster scanning, and that MEGs with neither magnetic contamination nor jitter can be measured by the stimulator.
Keiko MOMOSE Yoshikazu ISHIHARA Akihiko UCHIYAMA
This letter shows that VEPs can be easily measured by using color cards as the color stimulus, and that the responses evoked by a difference in chroma could be described largely by the value of the first principal component in principal component analysis.