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Revista mexicana de ingeniería biomédica

versión On-line ISSN 2395-9126versión impresa ISSN 0188-9532

Resumen

LINDIG-LEON, C.  y  YANEZ-SUAREZ, O.. Optimized Detection of the Infrequent Response in P300-Based Brain-Computer Interfaces. Rev. mex. ing. bioméd [online]. 2013, vol.34, n.1, pp.53-69. ISSN 2395-9126.

This paper presents an application developed on the BCI2000 platform which reduces the average spelling time per symbol on the Donchin speller. The motivation was to reduce the compromise between spelling rate and spelling accuracy due to the large amount of responses required in order to perform coherent average techniques. The methodology was made under a Bayesian approach which allows calculation of each target's class posterior probability. This result indicates the probability of each response of belonging to the infrequent class. When there is enough evidence to make a decision the system stops the stimulation process and moves on with the next symbol, otherwise it continues stimulating the user until it finds the selected letter. The average spelling rate, after using the proposed methodology with 14 healthy users and a maximum number of 5 stimulation sequences, was of 6.1 ± 0.63 char/min, compared to a constant rate of 3.93 char/min with the standard system.

Palabras llave : brain-computer interface; oddball paradigm; Bayesian inference.

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