4.6 Article

Improving motor imagery classification during induced motor perturbations

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEURAL ENGINEERING
Volume 18, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.1088/1741-2552/ac123f

Keywords

motor imagery; brain-computer interfacing; induced movements; neuro-muscular electrical stimulation; motor disturbances; afferent signals; feedback contingency

Funding

  1. EU-EUROSTARS [E!113550]
  2. Institute of Information & Communications Technology Planning & Evaluation (IITP) - Korea Government (Development of BCI based Brain and Cognitive Computing Technology for Recognizing User's Intentions using Deep Learning) [2017-0-00451]
  3. Korea Government [2019-0-00079]
  4. German Ministry for Education and Research (BMBF) [01IS14013A-E, 01GQ1115, 01GQ0850, 01IS18025A, 01IS18037A]
  5. German Research Foundation (DFG) under Grant Math+ [EXC 2046/1, 390685689]
  6. Basic Research Program of the National Research University Higher School of Economics (HSE University)
  7. [MINECO-RyC-2014-15671]
  8. [PID2020-118829RB-I00]
  9. [H2020-EIC-FETPROACT-2019-951910-MAIA]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study investigates the impact of perturbing motor imagery tasks through peripheral stimulation, showing that inducing movements in non-coincident limbs does not affect BCI performance, while inducing movements in limbs involved in the tasks can be alleviated through spatial filtering. The study also demonstrates the potential use of residual power of sensorimotor rhythm to predict BCI user performance under movement disturbances.
Objective. Motor imagery is the mental simulation of movements. It is a common paradigm to design brain-computer interfaces (BCIs) that elicits the modulation of brain oscillatory activity similar to real, passive and induced movements. In this study, we used peripheral stimulation to provoke movements of one limb during the performance of motor imagery tasks. Unlike other works, in which induced movements are used to support the BCI operation, our goal was to test and improve the robustness of motor imagery based BCI systems to perturbations caused by artificially generated movements. Approach. We performed a BCI session with ten participants who carried out motor imagery of three limbs. In some of the trials, one of the arms was moved by neuromuscular stimulation. We analysed 2-class motor imagery classifications with and without movement perturbations. We investigated the performance decrease produced by these disturbances and designed different computational strategies to attenuate the observed classification accuracy drop. Main results. When the movement was induced in a limb not coincident with the motor imagery classes, extracting oscillatory sources of the movement imagination tasks resulted in BCI performance being similar to the control (undisturbed) condition; when the movement was induced in a limb also involved in the motor imagery tasks, the performance drop was significantly alleviated by spatially filtering out the neural noise caused by the stimulation. We also show that the loss of BCI accuracy was accompanied by weaker power of the sensorimotor rhythm. Importantly, this residual power could be used to predict whether a BCI user will perform with sufficient accuracy under the movement disturbances. Significance. We provide methods to ameliorate and even eliminate motor related afferent disturbances during the performance of motor imagery tasks. This can help improving the reliability of current motor imagery based BCI systems.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available