| Literature DB >> 31581619 |
Yuan-Pin Lin1, Ting-Yu Chen2, Wei-Jen Chen3,4.
Abstract
Mobile electroencephalogram (EEG)-sensing technologies have rapidly progressed and made the access of neuroelectrical brain activity outside the laboratory in everyday life more realistic. However, most existing EEG headsets exhibit a fixed design, whereby its immobile montage in terms of electrode density and coverage inevitably poses a great challenge with applicability and generalizability to the fundamental study and application of the brain-computer interface (BCI). In this study, a cost-efficient, custom EEG-electrode holder infrastructure was designed through the assembly of primary components, including the sensor-positioning ring, inter-ring bridge, and bridge shield. It allows a user to (re)assemble a compact holder grid to accommodate a desired number of electrodes only to the regions of interest of the brain and iteratively adapt it to a given head size for optimal electrode-scalp contact and signal quality. This study empirically demonstrated its easy-to-fabricate nature by a low-end fused deposition modeling (FDM) 3D printer and proved its practicability of capturing event-related potential (ERP) and steady-state visual-evoked potential (SSVEP) signatures over 15 subjects. This paper highlights the possibilities for a cost-efficient electrode-holder assembly infrastructure with replaceable montage, flexibly retrofitted in an unlimited fashion, for an individual for distinctive fundamental EEG studies and BCI applications.Entities:
Keywords: BCI; mobile EEG recordings; montage-replaceable headsets
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31581619 PMCID: PMC6806080 DOI: 10.3390/s19194273
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Figure 1Illustration of the developed electrode-holder assembly infrastructure. (A) Three primary components and their assembly procedures. The sizes are in millimeter (N = 11, 13, 40, and 50 used in this work); (B) four assembly embodiments with coverages of the entire scalp and individual regions of interest (simulated by 3D design software).
Figure 2Implementation of an 8-electrode holder assembly grid. (A) Assembled headset embedded with Cognionics dry electrodes; (B) 8-channel montage; (C) headset wore on the head at different view angles.
Figure 3The ERP outcomes recorded in an auditory oddball ERP paradigm. (A) ERP images of Pz from a representative subject; (B) ERP profiles and P300 SNR (i.e., 300–500 ms) of Pz summarized by 15 participants; (C) averaged topographic mapping of P300 SNR using the adopted eight electrodes.
Figure 4The SSVEP outcomes corresponding to frequency-coded visual flickers against fixation cross. (A) Temporal profiles of Oz from a representative subject; (B) spectral profiles of Oz from the same representative subject; (C) averaged 8-ch topographic mapping of SSVEP SNR using 4-s trials by 15 participants.