Classification of EEG signals to identify variations in attention during motor task execution
•In real-world settings BCI users experience changes in attention to the main task.•BCI performance is significantly reduced with shifts in the user’s attention.•Attention to a task can be classified from EEG time and time-frequency features.•EEG channels located over the motor cortex provided the h...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of neuroscience methods 2017-06, Vol.284, p.27-34 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | •In real-world settings BCI users experience changes in attention to the main task.•BCI performance is significantly reduced with shifts in the user’s attention.•Attention to a task can be classified from EEG time and time-frequency features.•EEG channels located over the motor cortex provided the highest classification accuracy.•A General Gaussian distribution of time-frequency features improved BCI performance.
Brain-computer interface (BCI) systems in neuro-rehabilitation use brain signals to control external devices. User status such as attention affects BCI performance; thus detecting the user’s attention drift due to internal or external factors is essential for high detection accuracy.
An auditory oddball task was applied to divert the users’ attention during a simple ankle dorsiflexion movement. Electroencephalogram signals were recorded from eighteen channels. Temporal and time-frequency features were projected to a lower dimension space and used to analyze the effect of two attention levels on motor tasks in each participant. Then, a global feature distribution was constructed with the projected time-frequency features of all participants from all channels and applied for attention classification during motor movement execution.
Time-frequency features led to significantly better classification results with respect to the temporal features, particularly for electrodes located over the motor cortex. Motor cortex channels had a higher accuracy in comparison to other channels in the global discrimination of attention level.
Previous methods have used the attention to a task to drive external devices, such as the P300 speller. However, here we focus for the first time on the effect of attention drift while performing a motor task.
It is possible to explore user’s attention variation when performing motor tasks in synchronous BCI systems with time-frequency features. This is the first step towards an adaptive real-time BCI with an integrated function to reveal attention shifts from the motor task. |
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ISSN: | 0165-0270 1872-678X |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.jneumeth.2017.04.008 |