File Download

There are no files associated with this item.

  • Find it @ UNIST can give you direct access to the published full text of this article. (UNISTARs only)
Related Researcher

김성필

Kim, Sung-Phil
Brain-Computer Interface Lab.
Read More

Views & Downloads

Detailed Information

Cited time in webofscience Cited time in scopus
Metadata Downloads

Task-relevant stimulus design improves P300-based brain–computer interfaces

Author(s)
Kim, JongsuCho, Yang SeokKim, Sung-Phil
Issued Date
2024-12
DOI
10.1088/1741-2552/ada0e3
URI
https://scholarworks.unist.ac.kr/handle/201301/85504
Citation
JOURNAL OF NEURAL ENGINEERING, v.21, no.6, pp.066046
Abstract
Objective. In the pursuit of refining P300-based brain–computer interfaces (BCIs), our research aims to propose a novel stimulus design focused on selective attention and task relevance to address the challenges of P300-based BCIs, including the necessity of repetitive stimulus presentations, accuracy improvement, user variability, and calibration demands. Approach. In the oddball task for P300-based BCIs, we develop a stimulus design involving task-relevant dynamic stimuli implemented as finger-tapping to enhance the elicitation and consistency of event-related potentials (ERPs). We further improve the performance of P300-based BCIs by optimizing ERP feature extraction and classification in offline analyses. Main results. With the proposed stimulus design, online P300-based BCIs in 37 healthy participants achieve an accuracy of 91.2% and an information transfer rate (ITR) of 28.37 bits/min with two stimulus repetitions. With optimized computational modeling in BCIs, our offline analyses reveal the possibility of single-trial execution, showcasing an accuracy of 91.7% and an ITR of 59.92 bits/min. Furthermore, our exploration into the feasibility of across-subject zero-calibration BCIs through offline analyses, where a BCI built on a dataset of 36 participants is directly applied to a left-out participant with no calibration, yields an accuracy of 94.23% and the ITR of 31.56 bits/min with two stimulus repetitions and the accuracy of 87.75% and the ITR of 52.61 bits/min with single-trial execution. Whenusing the finger-tapping stimulus, the variability in performance among participants is the lowest, and a greater increase in performance is observed especially for those showing lower performance using the conventional color-changing stimulus. Significance. Using a novel task-relevant dynamic stimulus design, this study achieves one of the highest levels of P300-based BCI performance to date. This underscores the importance of coupling stimulus paradigms with computational methods for improving P300-based BCIs.
Publisher
Institute of Physics Publishing
ISSN
1741-2560
Keyword (Author)
P300-based BCIstimulus designtask relevanceselective attentionsingle-trial BCIcalibration-freeuser variability
Keyword
NEURAL-NETWORKSMOTOR IMAGERYP300EEGCOMPONENTSAMPLITUDE

qrcode

Items in Repository are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.