A Grating Based High-Frequency Motion Stimulus Paradigm for Steady-State Motion Visual Evoked Potentials
Objective: This paper proposes a novel type of stimulus in the shape of sinusoidal gratings displayed with an imperceptibly high-frequency motion. The stimulus has been designed for use in BCI (Brain Computer Interface) applications that employ visually evoked potentials (VEPs) in an effort to mitig...
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Zusammenfassung: | Objective: This paper proposes a novel type of stimulus in the shape of
sinusoidal gratings displayed with an imperceptibly high-frequency motion. The
stimulus has been designed for use in BCI (Brain Computer Interface)
applications that employ visually evoked potentials (VEPs) in an effort to
mitigate discomfort associated with VEPs. The stimuli set included traditional
VEP stimuli, already established in the literature, allowing comparative
analyses. We conducted analyses of signal distinction measures by calculating
the signal-to-noise ratio and the classification performance of its evoked
potentials. Methods: Fourteen participants were seated in a dimly lit room
facing a display. Participants' fixation on the central stimulus was controlled
by means of a desktop eye tracker. Participants attended a flicker-based
steady-state VEP (SSVEP) task, a motion-based steady-state-motion VEP (SSMVEP)
task, and the novel stimulus task (the imperceptible grating SSMVEP).
Participants were asked to complete behavioral fatigue scale tasks. Results: A
significant effect of stimulus type was observed, accompanied by insignificant
differences in prediction accuracy. Partially significant task effects were
obtained in fatigue scale tasks. Conclusion: The study revealed that the
imperceptible grating SSMVEP stimulus successfully evoked SSMVEP responses
within acceptable margins in the related cortical regions. This novel stimulus
contributes to BCI research by providing an imperceptible interface, improving
already established stimuli design in the SSVEP and the SSMVEP literature.
Significance: The present paper provides a novel SSMVEP stimulus type that may
inform the future design of effective VEP-based BCI paradigms that allow
seamless interaction with computer interfaces. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2312.15682 |