کد مقاله | کد نشریه | سال انتشار | مقاله انگلیسی | نسخه تمام متن |
---|---|---|---|---|
5040447 | 1370417 | 2016 | 8 صفحه PDF | دانلود رایگان |
- Elderly participants performed a five session tactile ERP-BCI training.
- Training significantly increased underlying EEG features used for BCI control.
- Mean accuracies above 95% and mean ITR above 20 bits min1 were achieved.
- Highest combination of mean accuracy and speed ever reported for a tactile BCI.
Tactile event-related potential (ERP) are rarely used as input signal to control brain-computer-interfaces (BCI) due to their low accuracy and speed (information transfer rate, ITR). Age-related loss of tactile sensibility might further decrease their viability for the target population of BCI. In this study we investigated whether training improves tactile ERP-BCI performance within a virtual wheelchair navigation task. Elderly subjects participated in 5 sessions and tactors were placed at legs, abdomen and back. Mean accuracy and ITR increased from 88.43%/4.5 bits minâ1 in the 1st to 92.56%/4.98 bits minâ1 in the last session. The mean P300 amplitude increased from 5.46 μV to 9.22 μV. In an optional task participants achieved an accuracy of 95,56% and a mean ITR of 20,73 bits minâ1 which is the highest ever achieved with tactile stimulation. Our sample of elderly people further contributed to the external validity of our results.
Journal: Biological Psychology - Volume 121, Part A, December 2016, Pages 117-124