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Brain-Computer Interface (BCI) : Raghuvarma Basavaraju
Brain-Computer Interface (BCI) : Raghuvarma Basavaraju
Presentation by
Raghuvarma Basavaraju
12/20/08 DCS860A
Agenda
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. What is BCI? BCI Disciplines Why BCI? BCI paradigms Applications of BCI Current trends and Future directions References
What is a BCI?
BCIs read electrical signals or other manifestations of brain activity and translate them into a digital form that computers can understand, process, and convert into actions of some kind, such as moving a cursor or turning on a TV. BCI can help people with inabilities to control computers, wheelchairs, televisions, or other devices with brain activity.
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Ways of measuring neural signals from the human brain Methods and algorithms for decoding brain states/intentions from these signals and Methodology and algorithms for mapping the decoded brain activity to intended behavior or action.
BCI Disciplines
Nanotechnology Biotechnology Information technology Cognitive science Computer science Biomedical engineering Neuroscience Applied mathematics
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BCI Paradigms
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Passive endogenous: specific mental imagination activity for example, motor imagery or mental arithmetic; active endogenous: active neurofeedback and unrestricted mental imagination using the operant-conditioning principlea no specifics cognitive, just do it principle; passive exogenous: responses to externally driven stimuli to evoke specific brain responses called event-related potentials (ERPs); and active exogenous: consciously modified responses to external stimuli, often combined with neurofeedback.
Subjects use specific thoughts as passwords (called pass-thoughts).When someone tries to access a protected computer system or building, they think of their passthought.A headpiece with electrodes records the brain signals.The system extracts the signals features for computer processing,which includes identification of the feature subset that best and most consistently represents the pass-thought.The biometric system then compares the subset to those recorded for authorized users.
Unimodal to multimodal - that is, simultaneous monitoring of brain activity using several devices and combining BCI with multimodal HCIs; Simple signal-processing tools to more advanced machine learning and multidimensional data mining; Synchronous binary decision to multidegree control and asynchronous self-paced control; Open-loop to closed-loop control - neurofeedback combined with multimodal HCI; and Laboratory tests to practical trials in the noisy real world environment.
References
1. 2. Sixto Ortiz Jr., "Brain-Computer Interfaces: Where Human and Machine Meet," Computer, vol. 40, no. 1, pp. 17-21, Jan., 2007 Andrzej Cichocki, Yoshikazu Washizawa, Tomasz Rutkowski, Hovagim Bakardjian, Anh-Huy Phan, Seungjin Choi, Hyekyoung Lee, Qibin Zhao, Liqing Zhang, Yuanqing Li, "Noninvasive BCIs: Multiway SignalProcessing Array Decompositions," Computer, vol. 41, no. 10, pp. 34-42, Oct., 2008 Anton Nijholt, Desney Tan, Gert Pfurtscheller, Clemens Brunner, Jos del R. Mill, Brendan Allison, Bernhard Graimann, Florin Popescu, Benjamin Blankertz, Klaus-R. M?, "Brain-Computer Interfacing for Intelligent Systems," IEEE Intelligent Systems, vol. 23, no. 3, pp. 72-79, May/Jun, 2008 1. F. Babiloni, A. Cichocki, and S. Gao, eds., special issue, Brain-Computer Interfaces: Towards Practical Implementations and Potential Applications, ComputationalIntelligence and Neuroscience, 2007; P. Sajda, K-R. Mueller, and K.V. Shenoy, eds., special issue, Brain Computer Interfaces, IEEE Signal Processing Magazine,Jan. 2008.
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