An Event-Driven AR-Process Model for EEG-Based BCIs With Rapid Trial Sequences

被引:7
作者
Gonzalez-Navarro, Paula [1 ]
Marghi, Yeganeh M. [1 ]
Azari, Bahar [1 ]
Akcakaya, Murat [2 ]
Erdogmus, Deniz [1 ]
机构
[1] Northeastern Univ, Elect & Comp Engn Dept, Cognit Syst Lab, Boston, MA 02115 USA
[2] Univ Pittsburgh, Dept Elect & Comp Engn, Pittsburgh, PA 15261 USA
关键词
EEG; BCI; signal model; event-related potential; RSVP keyboard;
D O I
10.1109/TNSRE.2019.2903840
中图分类号
R318 [生物医学工程];
学科分类号
0831 ;
摘要
Electroencephalography (EEG) is an effective non-invasive measurement method to infer user intent in brain-computer interface (BCI) systems for control and communication, however, these systems often lack sufficient accuracy and speed due to low separability of class-conditional EEG feature distributions. Many factors impact system performance, including inadequate training datasets and models' ignorance of the temporal dependency of brain responses to serial stimuli. Here, we propose a signal model for event-related responses in the EEG evoked with a rapid sequence of stimuli in BCI applications. The model describes the EEG as a superposition of impulse responses time-locked to stimuli corrupted with an autoregressive noise process. The performance of the signal model is assessed in the context of RSVP keyboard, a language-model-assisted EEG-based BCI for typing. EEG data obtained for model calibration from 10 healthy participants are used to fit and compare two models: the proposed sequence-based EEG model and the trial-based feature-class-conditional distribution model that ignores temporal dependencies, which has been used in the previous work. The simulation studies indicate that the earlier model that ignores temporal dependencies may be causing drastic reductions in achievable information transfer rate (ITR). Furthermore, the proposed model, with better regularization, may achieve improved accuracy with fewer calibration data samples, potentially helping to reduce calibration time. Specifically, results show an average 8.6% increase in (cross-validated) calibration AUC for a single channel of EEG, and 54% increase in the ITR in a typing task.
引用
收藏
页码:798 / 804
页数:7
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