Inter-stimulus phase coherence in steady-state somatosensory evoked potentials and its application in improving the performance of single-channel MI-BCI.

2021 
Objective. With the development of clinical applications of motor imagery-based brain-computer interfaces (MI-BCIs), a single-channel MI-BCI system that can be easily assembled is an attractive goal. However, due to the low quality of the spectral power features in the traditional MI-BCI paradigm, the recognition performance of current single-channel systems is far lower than that of multi-channel systems, impeding their use in clinical applications.Approach.In this study, the subjects' right and left hands were stimulated simultaneously at different frequencies to induce steady-state somatosensory evoked potentials (SSSEP). Subjects then performed motor imagery (MI) tasks. A new electroencephalography (EEG) index, inter-stimulus phase coherence (ISPC), was built to measure phase desynchronization of SSSEP caused by MI. Then, ISPC is introduced as a feature into left-hand and right-hand MI recognition.Main results.ISPC analysis found that left-handed MI can cause a significant decrease in phase synchronization in contralateral sensorimotor SSSEP, while right-handed MI has little effect on it, and vice versa. Combining ISPC features with traditional spectral power features, the single-channel left-hand versus right-hand MI recognition accuracy reaches 81.0%, which is much higher than that observed with traditional MI paradigms (about 60%).Significance.This work shows that the hybrid MI-SSSEP paradigm can provide more sensitive EEG features to decode motor intentions, demonstrating its potential for clinical applications.
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