4.6 Article

BCI Control of a Robotic Arm Based on SSVEP With Moving Stimuli for Reach and Grasp Tasks

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IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/JBHI.2023.3277612

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Brain-computer interface (BCI); moving stimuli; reach and grasp; robotic arm; steady-state visual evoked potential (SSVEP)

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Brain-computer interface (BCI) technology allows patients and humans to control a robotic arm, but current BCI systems struggle to accurately manipulate multi-degree robotic arms. This study proposes a novel BCI paradigm using moving flickering stimuli, attached to the robotic arm's gripper, to enhance control performance. Experimental results demonstrate that this new paradigm outperforms conventional fixed flickering stimuli in completing reaching and grasping tasks in an unstructured environment.
Brain-computer interface (BCI) provides a novel technology for patients and healthy human subjects to control a robotic arm. Currently, BCI control of a robotic arm to complete the reaching and grasping tasks in an unstructured environment is still challenging because the current BCI technology does not meet the requirement of manipulating a multi-degree robotic arm accurately and robustly. BCI based on steady-state visual evoked potential (SSVEP) could output a high information transfer rate; however, the conventional SSVEP paradigm failed to control a robotic arm to move continuously and accurately because the users have to switch their gaze between the flickering stimuli and the target frequently. This study proposed a novel SSVEP paradigm in which the flickering stimuli were attached to the robotic arm's gripper and moved with it. First, an offline experiment was designed to investigate the effects of moving flickering stimuli on the SSVEP's responses and decoding accuracy. After that, contrast experiments were conducted, and twelve subjects were recruited to participate in a robotic arm control experiment using both the paradigm one (P1, with moving flickering stimuli) and the paradigm two (P2, conventional fixed flickering stimuli) using a block randomization design to balance their sequences. Double blinks were used to trigger the grasping action asynchronously whenever the subjects were confident that the position of the robotic arm's gripper was accurate enough. Experimental results showed that the paradigm P1 with moving flickering stimuli provided a much better control performance than the conventional paradigm P2 in completing a reaching and grasping task in an unstructured environment. Subjects' subjective feedback scored by a NASA-TLX mental workload scale also corroborated the BCI control performance. The results of this study suggest that the proposed control interface based on SSVEP BCI provides a better solution for robotic arm control to complete the accurate reaching and grasping tasks.

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