Brain Computer Interface
Brain Computer Interface
P.CHANAKYA.
Y9MC95008,
IV Semester, II MCA,
St.Anns College of P.G. Studies,
Chirala 523 187,
Contact: [email protected]
www.funnychanu.webs.com/seminor/bci.doc
Contents
1. INTRODUCTION
2. TYPES OF BCIs
INVASIVE BCI
PARTIALLY-INVASIVE BCI
NON-INVASIVE BCI
Signal Acquisition
Signal Pre-Processing
Signal Classification
Computer Interaction
5. LIMITATIONS
6. APPLICATIONS OF BCI
o
Bioengineering applications
Neuroscience research
Military Applications
Gaming
Counter terrorism
ABSTRACT
1.INTRODUCTION
Partially invasive BCI devices are implanted inside the skull but
rest outside the brain rather than within the grey matter. They produce
better resolution signals than non-invasive BCIs where the bone tissue
of the cranium deflects and deforms signals and have a lower risk of
forming scar-tissue in the brain than fully-invasive
BCIs.Electrocorticography (ECoG) measures the electrical activity of
the brain taken from beneath the skull in a similar way to non-
respective
Among
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the
scalp
recorded
digitization device. The acquired signals are often noisy and may
contain artefacts due to muscular and ocular movements.The EEG
signal processing subsystem is subdivided into a preprocessing unit,
responsible for artefact detection, and a feature extraction and
recognition unit that determines the command sent by the user to the
BCI. This command is in turn sent to the output subsystem which
generates a system answer that constitutes a feedback to the user
who can modulate his mental activities so as to produce those EEG
patterns that make the BCI accomplish his intents. Figure 5 illustrates
the basic scheduling of our BCI. The BCI period is the average time
between two consecutive answers and the EEG trial duration is the
duration of EEG that the BCI needs to analyze in order to generate an
answer. We assume that every EEG trial elicits a system answer.
BCI scheduling
The ideal BCI behave properly when the recognition error rate is
near zero.
In a real application, the false positive error (the system switches to
the active state while the corresponding EEG trial belongs to the
neutral EEG set) and the false negative error (the system switches to
the neutral state while the corresponding EEG trial belongs to the
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active set) are not zero. Depending on the application, these errors are
differently penalized.
We propose a less ideal BCI by introducing a transition state so
that the BCI cannot switch from the neutral to the active state
immediately. The BCI remains in the transition state as long as a
second Boolean variable B2 (confirmation) is false (Figure 7).
Table 1
The optimal values for the BCI parameters are determined in the training phase. However, they should
be continuously updated in order to take into account possible variations in the EEG caused by different brains
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background activities over time. Thus, BCI operation requires constant training and adaptation from both, the
user and the computer.
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3) Signal Classification:
once the signals are cleaned, they will be processed and
classified to find out which kind of mental task the subject is
performing.
4) Computer Interaction:
once the signals are classified, they will be used by an
appropriate algorithm for the development of a certain
application.
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Signal acquisition:
Methods for increasing signal-to-noise ratio (SNR), signal-tointerference
ratio (S/I)) as well as optimally combining spatial and temporal information.
Single trial analysis:
Overcoming noise and interference in order to avoid averaging and maximize bit rate.
Co-learning:
Jointly optimizing combined man-machine system and taking advantage of feedback.
5. LIMITATIONS
1.
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6. APPLICATIONS OF BCI
6.1. Bioengineering applications
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