A brain-computer interface based on high-frequency steady-state asymmetric visual evoked potentials*

Author(s):  
Liang Yue ◽  
Xiaolin Xiao ◽  
Minpeng Xu ◽  
Long Chen ◽  
Yijun Wang ◽  
...  
Author(s):  
Ebru Sayilgan ◽  
Yilmaz Kemal Yuce ◽  
Yalcin Isler

Brain-computer interface (BCI) system based on steady-state visual evoked potentials (SSVEP) have been acceleratingly used in different application areas from entertainment to rehabilitation, like clinical neuroscience, cognitive, and use of engineering researches. Of various electroencephalography paradigms, SSVEP-based BCI systems enable apoplectic people to communicate with outside world easily, due to their simple system structure, short or no training time, high temporal resolution, high information transfer rate, and affordable by comparing to other methods. SSVEP-based BCIs use multiple visual stimuli flickering at different frequencies to generate distinct commands. In this paper, we compared the classifier performances of combinations of binary commands flickering at seven different frequencies to determine which frequency pair gives the highest performance using temporal and spectral methods. For SSVEP frequency recognition, in total 25 temporal change characteristics of the signals and 15 frequency-based feature vectors extracted from the SSVEP signal. These feature vectors were applied to the input of seven well-known machine learning algorithms (Decision Tree, Discriminant Analysis, Logistic Regression, Naive Bayes, Support Vector Machines, Nearest Neighbour, and Ensemble Learning). In conclusion, we achieved 100% accuracy in 7.5 - 10 frequency pairs among these 2,520 distinct runs and we found that the most successful classifier is the Ensemble Learning classifier. The combination of these methods leads to an appropriate detailed and comparative analysis that represents the robustness and effectiveness of classical approaches.


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