CVAIIVNCJun 8, 2021

Subject-Independent Brain-Computer Interface for Decoding High-Level Visual Imagery Tasks

arXiv:2106.04026v213 citations
AI Analysis

This addresses the challenge of reducing variability in EEG signals for practical BCI systems, enabling more robust control of devices like drone swarms, though it appears incremental as it builds on existing methods.

The study tackled the problem of subject-independent decoding in brain-computer interfaces for high-level visual imagery tasks, achieving a performance of 0.72 with their proposed module, which improved over baseline models.

Brain-computer interface (BCI) is used for communication between humans and devices by recognizing status and intention of humans. Communication between humans and a drone using electroencephalogram (EEG) signals is one of the most challenging issues in the BCI domain. In particular, the control of drone swarms (the direction and formation) has more advantages compared to the control of a drone. The visual imagery (VI) paradigm is that subjects visually imagine specific objects or scenes. Reduction of the variability among EEG signals of subjects is essential for practical BCI-based systems. In this study, we proposed the subepoch-wise feature encoder (SEFE) to improve the performances in the subject-independent tasks by using the VI dataset. This study is the first attempt to demonstrate the possibility of generalization among subjects in the VI-based BCI. We used the leave-one-subject-out cross-validation for evaluating the performances. We obtained higher performances when including our proposed module than excluding our proposed module. The DeepConvNet with SEFE showed the highest performance of 0.72 among six different decoding models. Hence, we demonstrated the feasibility of decoding the VI dataset in the subject-independent task with robust performances by using our proposed module.

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