| Literature DB >> 23994208 |
Maarten De Vos1, Katharina Gandras2, Stefan Debener3.
Abstract
In a previous study we presented a low-cost, small, and wireless 14-channel EEG system suitable for field recordings (Debener et al., 2012, psychophysiology). In the present follow-up study we investigated whether a single-trial P300 response can be reliably measured with this system, while subjects freely walk outdoors. Twenty healthy participants performed a three-class auditory oddball task, which included rare target and non-target distractor stimuli presented with equal probabilities of 16%. Data were recorded in a seated (control condition) and in a walking condition, both of which were realized outdoors. A significantly larger P300 event-related potential amplitude was evident for targets compared to distractors (p<.001), but no significant interaction with recording condition emerged. P300 single-trial analysis was performed with regularized stepwise linear discriminant analysis and revealed above chance-level classification accuracies for most participants (19 out of 20 for the seated, 16 out of 20 for the walking condition), with mean classification accuracies of 71% (seated) and 64% (walking). Moreover, the resulting information transfer rates for the seated and walking conditions were comparable to a recently published laboratory auditory brain-computer interface (BCI) study. This leads us to conclude that a truly mobile auditory BCI system is feasible.Entities:
Keywords: Brain–computer interface; Mobile EEG; P300; Single-trial analysis
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23994208 DOI: 10.1016/j.ijpsycho.2013.08.010
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Psychophysiol ISSN: 0167-8760 Impact factor: 2.997