EEG Analyses of visual cue effects on executed movements

IF 2.7 4区 医学 Q2 BIOCHEMICAL RESEARCH METHODS
Patrick Suwandjieff , Gernot R. Müller-Putz
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background

In electroencephalographic (EEG) or electrocorticographic (ECoG) experiments, visual cues are commonly used for timing synchronization but may inadvertently induce neural activity and cognitive processing, posing challenges when decoding self-initiated tasks.

New method

To address this concern, we introduced four new visual cues (Fade, Rotation, Reference, and Star) and investigated their impact on brain signals. Our objective was to identify a cue that minimizes its influence on brain activity, facilitating cue-effect free classifier training for asynchronous applications, particularly aiding individuals with severe paralysis.

Results

22 able-bodied, right-handed participants aged 18–30 performed hand movements upon presentation of the visual cues. Analysis of time-variability between movement onset and cue-aligned data, grand average MRCP, and classification outcomes revealed significant differences among cues. Rotation and Reference cue exhibited favorable results in minimizing temporal variability, maintaining MRCP patterns, and achieving comparable accuracy to self-paced signals in classification.

Comparison with existing methods

Our study contrasts with traditional cue-based paradigms by introducing novel visual cues designed to mitigate unintended neural activity. We demonstrate the effectiveness of Rotation and Reference cue in eliciting consistent and accurate MRCPs during motor tasks, surpassing previous methods in achieving precise timing and high discriminability for classifier training.

Conclusions

Precision in cue timing is crucial for training classifiers, where both Rotation and Reference cue demonstrate minimal variability and high discriminability, highlighting their potential for accurate classifications in online scenarios. These findings offer promising avenues for refining brain-computer interface systems, particularly for individuals with motor impairments, by enabling more reliable and intuitive control mechanisms.

脑电图分析视觉线索对执行动作的影响
背景:在脑电图(EEG)或脑皮层电图(ECoG)实验中,视觉线索通常用于时间同步,但可能会无意中诱发神经活动和认知处理,从而给解码自发任务带来挑战:为了解决这个问题,我们引入了四种新的视觉线索(渐变、旋转、参考和星形),并研究了它们对大脑信号的影响。我们的目标是找出一种对大脑活动影响最小的线索,从而为异步应用中的无线索效应分类器训练提供便利,特别是为严重瘫痪的人提供帮助。结果:22 名 18-30 岁的右撇子健全参与者在呈现视觉线索时进行了手部运动。对动作开始和线索对齐数据之间的时间可变性、总平均 MRCP 和分类结果的分析表明,不同线索之间存在显著差异。旋转和参考线索在最小化时间变异性、保持 MRCP 模式以及在分类中达到与自节奏信号相当的准确性方面表现出了良好的效果:我们的研究与传统的基于线索的范例不同,它引入了新颖的视觉线索,旨在减轻意外的神经活动。我们证明了 "旋转 "和 "参考 "线索在运动任务中诱发一致且准确的 MRCP 的有效性,在实现分类器训练的精确计时和高可辨别性方面超越了之前的方法:提示时机的精确性对于训练分类器至关重要,而旋转和参考提示均表现出最小的可变性和高可辨别性,突出了它们在在线场景中进行精确分类的潜力。这些发现为完善脑机接口系统,尤其是针对运动障碍患者的脑机接口系统,提供了更可靠、更直观的控制机制。
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来源期刊
Journal of Neuroscience Methods
Journal of Neuroscience Methods 医学-神经科学
CiteScore
7.10
自引率
3.30%
发文量
226
审稿时长
52 days
期刊介绍: The Journal of Neuroscience Methods publishes papers that describe new methods that are specifically for neuroscience research conducted in invertebrates, vertebrates or in man. Major methodological improvements or important refinements of established neuroscience methods are also considered for publication. The Journal''s Scope includes all aspects of contemporary neuroscience research, including anatomical, behavioural, biochemical, cellular, computational, molecular, invasive and non-invasive imaging, optogenetic, and physiological research investigations.
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