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October 1, 2023
Journal Article
Title
It takes two (seconds). Decreasing encoding time for two-choice functional near-infrared spectroscopy brain-computer interface communication
Abstract
Significance: Brain computer interfaces (BCIs) can provide severely motorimpaired patients with a motor-independent communication channel. Functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS) constitutes a promising BCI-input modality given its high mobility, safety, user comfort, cost-efficiency, and relatively low motion sensitivity.
Aim: The present study aimed at developing an efficient and convenient two-choice fNIRS communication BCI by implementing a relatively short encoding time (2 s), considerably increasing communication speed, and decreasing the cognitive load of BCI users.
Approach: To encode binary answers to 10 biographical questions, 10 healthy adults repeatedly performed a combined motor-speech imagery task within 2 different time windows guided by auditory instructions. Each answer-encoding run consisted of 10 trials. Answers were decoded during the ongoing experiment from the time course of the individually identified most-informative fNIRS channel-bychromophore combination.
Results: The answers of participants were decoded online with an accuracy of 85.8% (run-based group mean). Post-hoc analysis yielded an average single-Trial accuracy of 68.1%. Analysis of the effect of number of trial repetitions showed that the best information-Transfer rate could be obtained by combining four encoding trials.
Conclusions: The study demonstrates that an encoding time as short as 2 s can enable immediate, efficient, and convenient fNIRS-BCI communication.
Aim: The present study aimed at developing an efficient and convenient two-choice fNIRS communication BCI by implementing a relatively short encoding time (2 s), considerably increasing communication speed, and decreasing the cognitive load of BCI users.
Approach: To encode binary answers to 10 biographical questions, 10 healthy adults repeatedly performed a combined motor-speech imagery task within 2 different time windows guided by auditory instructions. Each answer-encoding run consisted of 10 trials. Answers were decoded during the ongoing experiment from the time course of the individually identified most-informative fNIRS channel-bychromophore combination.
Results: The answers of participants were decoded online with an accuracy of 85.8% (run-based group mean). Post-hoc analysis yielded an average single-Trial accuracy of 68.1%. Analysis of the effect of number of trial repetitions showed that the best information-Transfer rate could be obtained by combining four encoding trials.
Conclusions: The study demonstrates that an encoding time as short as 2 s can enable immediate, efficient, and convenient fNIRS-BCI communication.
Author(s)
Open Access
Rights
CC BY 4.0: Creative Commons Attribution
Language
English