2024 |
Jeong, Chang Hyeon; Lim, Hyunmi; Lee, Jiye; Lee, Hye Sun; Ku, Jeonghun; Kang, Youn Joo In: Frontiers in Neuroscience, vol. 18, pp. 1373589, 2024. Abstract | Links | Tags: BCI, DSI-24, Neuromodulation @article{jeong2024attentional, Introduction: Brain computer interface-based action observation (BCI-AO) is a promising technique in detecting the user's cortical state of visual attention and providing feedback to assist rehabilitation. Peripheral nerve electrical stimulation (PES) is a conventional method used to enhance outcomes in upper extremity function by increasing activation in the motor cortex. In this study, we examined the effects of different pairings of peripheral nerve electrical stimulation (PES) during BCI-AO tasks and their impact on corticospinal plasticity. Materials and methods: Our innovative BCI-AO interventions decoded user's attentive watching during task completion. This process involved providing rewarding visual cues while simultaneously activating afferent pathways through PES. Fifteen stroke patients were included in the analysis. All patients underwent a 15 min BCI-AO program under four different experimental conditions: BCI-AO without PES, BCI-AO with continuous PES, BCI-AO with triggered PES, and BCI-AO with reverse PES application. PES was applied at the ulnar nerve of the wrist at an intensity equivalent to 120% of the sensory threshold and a frequency of 50 Hz. The experiment was conducted randomly at least 3 days apart. To assess corticospinal and peripheral nerve excitability, we compared pre and post-task (post 0, post 20 min) parameters of motor evoked potential and F waves under the four conditions in the muscle of the affected hand.The findings indicated that corticospinal excitability in the affected hemisphere was higher when PES was synchronously applied with AO training, using BCI during a state of attentive watching. In contrast, there was no effect on corticospinal activation when PES was applied continuously or in the reverse manner. This paradigm promoted corticospinal plasticity for up to 20 min after task completion. Importantly, the effect was more evident in patients over 65 years of age.The results showed that task-driven corticospinal plasticity was higher when PES was applied synchronously with a highly attentive brain state during the action observation task, compared to continuous or asynchronous application. This study provides insight into how optimized BCI technologies dependent on brain state used in conjunction with other rehabilitation training could enhance treatment-induced neural plasticity. |
Li, Jian; Masullo, Massimiliano; Maffei, Luigi; Pascale, Aniello; Chau, Chi-kwan; Lin, Minqi In: Applied Acoustics, vol. 218, pp. 109904, 2024. Abstract | Links | Tags: DSI-24 @article{li2024improving, According with soundscape strategies to improve the perception of the sound environment, laboratory studies have proven that introducing water sounds into urban spaces can be both an effective strategy for the informational-attentional masking of road traffic noise, and restorativeness creation. To extend previous laboratory findings and test the effectiveness and applicability of different spatial variations of water sounds in urban parks, a sound installation was prepared, and an experiment was conducted. Three different position-varied water-sound sequences were augmented into an existing University campus green park through surround sound design method with four Bluetooth loudspeakers. The mental effects and attention process were assessed by analyzing the EEG signals including aperiodic, oscillatory components and sensor-level functional connectivity, along with psychological scales. The water sounds played in-situ, brought more visual processing related to spatial attention and stimulus-driven salience. And the changes in the alpha band and the related theta/alpha ratio among four conditions showed more relaxation state induced by the introduction of water sounds, consistent with the positive effects on emotion saliency and perceived restorativeness. Moreover, different spatial variations of water sounds, especially for the two-position switching setting, modulated the activity of the attentional network related to the restoration process via the alpha-theta synchronization. |
Kim, Sanghee; Ryu, Jihye; Lee, Yujeong; Park, Hyejin; Lee, Kweonhyoung In: Buildings, vol. 14, no. 1, pp. 237, 2024. Abstract | Links | Tags: DSI-24, VR @article{kim2024methods, We propose a technique that allows designers to develop energy-efficient buildings focused on occupants from the early design stage. The technique integrates the physiological responses of occupants and the energy performance of buildings. Among the architectural design elements, we considered the aspect ratio, ceiling height, and window-to-wall ratio as design variables and created 30 design alternatives for a single-occupancy room in a postpartum care center. These design alternatives were recreated in virtual reality, allowing 33 female participants to immerse themselves in the designed rooms. During the experiment, we collected electroencephalography (EEG) data from the participants. Furthermore, we used DesignBuilder to simulate 30 design alternatives and calculated the primary energy consumption per unit area for each alternative. By integrating the EEG data and energy performance analysis, we identified the design alternative among the 30 options that positively influenced the physiological responses of occupants while also being energy efficient. The selected alternative was designed with an aspect ratio of 1:1.6, a ceiling height of 2.3 m, and a window-to-wall ratio of 60%. This research represents a creative exploration that demonstrates how studies combining human physiological responses and architecture can evolve through integration with other subjects. Our findings provide a robust framework to explore the relationship between physiological responses and energy optimization for detailed architectural design elements. |
2023 |
Park, Jaeyoung; Wang, Soyoung; Lee, Seungji; Seo, Seungbeom; Lee, Nayoung; Kim, Seongcheol Viewer Emotional Response to Webtoon-Based Drama: An EEG Analysis Journal Article In: International Journal of Human–Computer Interaction, pp. 1–15, 2023. Abstract | Links | Tags: DSI-24 @article{park2023viewer, Amidst entertainment market uncertainties, cross-medium content extension has emerged as a powerful strategy. Webtoons, digital cartoons, stand out as significant resources. However, limited research has delved into effective strategies for extending these narratives. Acknowledging the crucial role of evoking viewer emotions in content success, this study investigates viewer emotional responses. Departing from conventional methods, we employ neuroscientific measurement—specifically, electroencephalography (EEG)—to capture real-time viewer emotions during content consumption, assessing valence and arousal. We examine the impact of webtoon-drama similarity on viewer emotions and scene attributes that heighten emotional responses. By integrating EEG data, interview insights, and scene analysis, our findings underscore intensified emotions when drama scenes mirror webtoon elements, particularly in sets and directing. Effective replication relies on drama-specific attributes such as choreography, original soundtracks, and casting. This study contributes academically by using EEG to evaluate webtoons’ value as original sources and practically by offering concrete webtoon extension strategy. |
Liu, F.; Yang, P.; Shu, Y.; Liu, N.; Sheng, J.; Luo, J.; Wang, X.; Liu, Y. Emotion Recognition from Few-Channel EEG Signals by Integrating Deep Feature Aggregation and Transfer Learning Journal Article In: IEEE Transactions on Affective Computing, no. 01, pp. 1-17, 2023, ISSN: 1949-3045. Abstract | Links | Tags: DSI-24 @article{10328701, Electroencephalogram (EEG) signals have been widely studied in human emotion recognition. The majority of existing EEG emotion recognition algorithms utilize dozens or hundreds of electrodes covering the whole scalp region (denoted as full-channel EEG devices in this paper). Nowadays, more and more portable and miniature EEG devices with only a few electrodes (denoted as few-channel EEG devices in this paper) are emerging. However, emotion recognition from few-channel EEG data is challenging because the device can only capture EEG signals from a portion of the brain area. Moreover, existing full-channel algorithms cannot be directly adapted to few-channel EEG signals due to the significant inter-variation between full-channel and few-channel EEG devices. To address these challenges, we propose a novel few-channel EEG emotion recognition framework from the perspective of knowledge transfer. We leverage full-channel EEG signals to provide supplementary information for few-channel signals via a transfer learning-based model CD-EmotionNet, which consists of a base emotion model for efficient emotional feature extraction and a cross-device transfer learning strategy. This strategy helps to enhance emotion recognition performance on few-channel EEG data by utilizing knowledge learned from full-channel EEG data. To evaluate our cross-device EEG emotion transfer learning framework, we construct an emotion dataset containing paired 18-channel and 5-channel EEG signals from 25 subjects, as well as 5-channel EEG signals from 13 other subjects. Extensive experiments show that our framework outperforms state-of-the-art EEG emotion recognition methods by a large margin. |
Chan, Melody MY; Choi, Coco XT; Tsoi, Tom CW; Shea, Caroline KS; Yiu, Klaire WK; Han, Yvonne MY In: Brain Stimulation, vol. 16, iss. 8, pp. P1604-1616, 2023. Abstract | Links | Tags: Biomarker, DSI-24, Neuromodulation @article{chan2023effects, Background Few treatment options are available for targeting core symptoms of autism spectrum disorder (ASD). The development of treatments that target common neural circuit dysfunctions caused by known genetic defects, namely, disruption of the excitation/inhibition (E/I) balance, is promising. Transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) is capable of modulating the E/I balance in healthy individuals, yet its clinical and neurobiological effects in ASD remain elusive. Objective This double-blind, randomized, sham-controlled trial investigated the effects of multisession cathodal prefrontal tDCS coupled with online cognitive remediation on social functioning, information processing efficiency and the E/I balance in ASD patients aged 14–21 years. Methods Sixty individuals were randomly assigned to receive either active or sham tDCS (10 sessions in total, 20 min/session, stimulation intensity: 1.5 mA, cathode: F3, anode: Fp2, size of electrodes: 25 cm2) combined with 20 min of online cognitive remediation. Social functioning, information processing efficiency during cognitive tasks, and theta- and gamma-band E/I balance were measured one day before and after the treatment. Results Compared to sham tDCS, active cathodal tDCS was effective in enhancing overall social functioning [F(1, 58) = 6.79, p = .012, ηp2 = 0.105, 90% CI: (0.013, 0.234)] and information processing efficiency during cognitive tasks [F(1, 58) = 10.07, p = .002, ηp2 = 0.148, 90% CI: (0.034, 0.284)] in these individuals. Electroencephalography data showed that this cathodal tDCS protocol was effective in reducing the theta-band E/I ratio of the cortical midline structures [F(1, 58) = 4.65, p = .035, ηp2 = 0.074, 90% CI: (0.010, 0.150)] and that this reduction significantly predicted information processing efficiency enhancement (b = −2.546, 95% BCa CI: [-4.979, −0.113], p = .041). Conclusion Our results support the use of multisession cathodal tDCS over the left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex combined with online cognitive remediation for reducing the elevated theta-band E/I ratio in sociocognitive information processing circuits in ASD patients, resulting in more adaptive regulation of global brain dynamics that is associated with enhanced information processing efficiency after the intervention. |
Mizrahi, Dor; Laufer, Ilan; Zuckerman, Inon Modulation of Beta Power as a Function of Attachment Style and Feedback Valence Conference International Conference on Brain Informatics, Springer 2023. Abstract | Links | Tags: DSI-24 @conference{mizrahi2023modulation, Attachment theory is concerned with the basic level of social connection associated with approach and withdrawal mechanisms. Consistent patterns of attachment may be divided into two major categories: secure and insecure. As secure and insecure attachment style individuals vary in terms of their responses to affective stimuli and negatively valanced cues, the goal of this study was to examine whether there are differences in Beta power activation between secure and insecure individuals to feedback given while performing the arrow flanker task. An interaction emerged between Attachment style (secure or insecure) and Feedback type (success or failure) has shown differences in Beta power as a function of both independent factors. These results corroborate previous findings indicating that secure and insecure individuals differently process affective stimuli. |
Georgiadis, Kostas; Kalaganis, Fotis P; Oikonomou, Vangelis P; Nikolopoulos, Spiros; Laskaris, Nikos A; Kompatsiaris, Ioannis Harneshing the Potential of EEG in Neuromarketing with Deep Learning and Riemannian Geometry Conference International Conference on Brain Informatics, Springer 2023. Abstract | Links | Tags: DSI-24, Neuromarketing @conference{georgiadis2023harneshing, Neuromarketing exploits neuroimaging techniques to study consumers’ responses to various marketing aspects, with the goal of gaining a more thorough understanding of the decision-making process. The neuroimaging technology encountered the most in neuromarketing studies is Electroencephalography (EEG), mainly due to its non-invasiveness, low cost and portability. Opposed to typical neuromarketing practices, which rely on signal-power related features, we introduce an efficient decoding scheme that is based on the principles of Riemannian Geometry and realized by means of a suitable deep learning (DL) architecture (i.e., SPDNet). We take advantage of a recently released, multi-subject, neuromarketing dataset to train SPDNet under the close-to-real-life scenario of product selection from a supermarket leaflet and compare its performance against standard tools in EEG-based neuromarketing. The sample covariance is used as an estimator of the ‘quasi-instantaneous’, brain activation pattern and derived from the multichannel signal recorded while the subject is gazing at a given product. Pattern derivation is followed by proper re-alignment to reduce covariate shift (inter-subject variability) before SPDNet casts its binary decision (i.e., “Buy”-“NoBuy”). The proposed decoder is characterized by sufficient generalizability to derive valid predictions upon unseen brain signals. Overall, our experimental results provide clear evidence about the superiority of the DL-decoder relatively to both conventional neuromarketing and alternative Riemannian Geometry-based approaches, and further demonstrate how neuromarketing can benefit from recent advances in data-centric machine learning and the availability of relevant experimental datasets. |
Georgiadis, Kostas; Kalaganis, Fotis P; Riskos, Kyriakos; Matta, Eleftheria; Oikonomou, Vangelis P; Yfantidou, Ioanna; Chantziaras, Dimitris; Pantouvakis, Kyriakos; Nikolopoulos, Spiros; Laskaris, Nikos A; others, NeuMa-the absolute Neuromarketing dataset en route to an holistic understanding of consumer behaviour Journal Article In: Scientific Data, vol. 10, no. 1, pp. 508, 2023. Abstract | Links | Tags: DSI-24, Neuromarketing @article{georgiadis2023neuma, Neuromarketing is a continuously evolving field that utilises neuroimaging technologies to explore consumers’ behavioural responses to specific marketing-related stimulation, and furthermore introduces novel marketing tools that could complement the traditional ones like questionnaires. In this context, the present paper introduces a multimodal Neuromarketing dataset that encompasses the data from 42 individuals who participated in an advertising brochure-browsing scenario. In more detail, participants were exposed to a series of supermarket brochures (containing various products) and instructed to select the products they intended to buy. The data collected for each individual executing this protocol included: (i) encephalographic (EEG) recordings, (ii) eye tracking (ET) recordings, (iii) questionnaire responses (demographic, profiling and product related questions), and (iv) computer mouse data. NeuMa dataset has both dynamic and multimodal nature and, due to the narrow availability of open relevant datasets, provides new and unique opportunities for researchers in the field to attempt a more holistic approach to neuromarketing. |
Riek, Nathan T; Susam, Busra T; Hudac, Caitlin M; Conner, Caitlin M; Akcakaya, Murat; Yun, Jane; White, Susan W; Mazefsky, Carla A; Gable, Philip A Feedback Related Negativity Amplitude is Greatest Following Deceptive Feedback in Autistic Adolescents Journal Article In: Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, pp. 1–11, 2023. Abstract | Links | Tags: Biomarker, DSI-24 @article{riek2023feedback, The purpose of this study is to investigate if feedback related negativity (FRN) can capture instantaneous elevated emotional reactivity in autistic adolescents. A measurement of elevated reactivity could allow clinicians to better support autistic individuals without the need for self-reporting or verbal conveyance. The study investigated reactivity in 46 autistic adolescents (ages 12–21 years) completing the Affective Posner Task which utilizes deceptive feedback to elicit distress presented as frustration. The FRN event-related potential (ERP) served as an instantaneous quantitative neural measurement of emotional reactivity. We compared deceptive and distressing feedback to both truthful but distressing feedback and truthful and non-distressing feedback using the FRN, response times in the successive trial, and Emotion Dysregulation Inventory (EDI) reactivity scores. Results revealed that FRN values were most negative to deceptive feedback as compared to truthful non-distressing feedback. Furthermore, distressing feedback led to faster response times in the successive trial on average. Lastly, participants with higher EDI reactivity scores had more negative FRN values for non-distressing truthful feedback compared to participants with lower reactivity scores. The FRN amplitude showed changes based on both frustration and reactivity. The findings of this investigation support using the FRN to better understand emotion regulation processes for autistic adolescents in future work. Furthermore, the change in FRN based on reactivity suggests the possible need to subgroup autistic adolescents based on reactivity and adjust interventions accordingly. |
Kim, Suhye; Kim, Jung-Hwan; Hyung, Wooseok; Shin, Suhkyung; Choi, Myoung Jin; Kim, Dong Hwan; Im, Chang-Hwan Characteristic Behaviors of Elementary Students in a Low Attention State During Online Learning Identified Using Electroencephalography Journal Article In: IEEE Transactions on Learning Technologies, 2023. Abstract | Links | Tags: Biomarker, DSI-24 @article{kim2023characteristic, With the widespread application of online education platforms, the necessity for identifying learner's mental states from webcam videos is increasing as it can be potentially applied to artificial intelligence-based automatic identification of learner's states. However, the behaviors that elementary school students frequently exhibit during online learning particularly when they are in a low attention state have rarely been investigated. This study employed electroencephalography (EEG) to continuously track changes in the learner's attention state during online learning. A new EEG index reflecting elementary students' attention level was developed using an EEG dataset acquired from 30 fourth graders during a computerized d2 test of attention. Characteristic behaviors of 24 elementary students in a low attention state were then identified from the webcam videos showing their upper bodies captured during 40-minute online lectures, with the proposed EEG index being used as a reference to determine their attention level at the time. Various characteristic behaviors were identified regarding participant's mouth, head, arms, and torso. For example, opening mouth or leaning back was observed more frequently in a low attention state than in a high attention state. It is expected that the characteristic behaviors reflecting learner's low attention state would be utilized as a useful reference in developing more interactive and effective online education systems. |
Cho, Ji Young; Wang, Ze-Yu; Hong, Yi-Kyung An EEG Study on the Interior Environmental Design Elements in Promoting Healing Journal Article In: Journal of the Korean Housing Association, vol. 34, no. 3, pp. 067–079, 2023. Abstract | Links | Tags: DSI-24 @article{cho2023eeg, This study aimed to identify the attributes of environmental design elements that promote healing. Eighteen college students participated in an EEG study, and their Ratio of Alpha to Beta (RAB) was examined in relation to eight interior design stimuli consisting of different conditions of illuminance (high/low), color (green/white), and biophilia ( natural/artificial). The EEGs of the 19 channels were measured using a dry-type EEG device (DSI-24). Participants also completed a survey questionnaire, choosing the best stimuli for healing environments and for wanting to stay. The EEG data were analyzed using a Wilcoxon signed-rank test to identify statistical differences in responses to different stimuli. The main results were as follows: (1) RAB was most frequently observed in the left temporal and parietal lobes; (2) when comparing pre- and post-stimulation, significant differences were observed between background EEG and six stimuli (S1, S3, S5, S6, S7, and S8); (3) RAB tended to be high with low illuminance, white walls, and artificial biophilia; and (4) the psychological and EEG responses did not match; stimuli with high illuminance and natural biophilia were selected the most for healing and wanting to stay environments. The results indicate the necessity for studying environmental responses via both physiological and psychological aspects as they compensate for each other. and artificial biophilia; and (4) the psychological and EEG responses did not match; stimuli with high illuminance and natural biophilia were selected the most for healing and wanting to stay environments. The results indicate the necessity for studying environmental responses via both physiological and psychological aspects as they compensate for each other. and artificial biophilia; and (4) the psychological and EEG responses did not match; stimuli with high illuminance and natural biophilia were selected the most for healing and wanting to stay environments. The results indicate the necessity for studying environmental responses via both physiological and psychological aspects as they compensate for each other. |
Fan, Tengwen; Zhang, Liming; Liu, Jianyi; Niu, Yanbin; Hong, Tian; Zhang, Wenfang; Shu, Hua; Zhao, Jingjing Phonemic mismatch negativity mediates the association between phoneme awareness and character reading ability in young Chinese children Journal Article In: Neuropsychologia, pp. 108624, 2023. Abstract | Links | Tags: DSI-24 @article{fan2023phonemic, Poor phonological awareness is associated with greater risk for reading disability. The underlying neural mechanism of such association may lie in the brain processing of phonological information. Lower amplitude of auditory mismatch negativity (MMN) has been associated with poor phonological awareness and with the presence of reading disability. The current study recorded auditory MMN to phoneme and lexical tone contrast with odd-ball paradigm and examined whether auditory MMN mediated the associations between phonological awareness and character reading ability through a three-year longitudinal study in 78 native Mandarin-speaking kindergarten children. Hierarchical linear regression and mediation analysis showed that the effect of phoneme awareness on the character reading ability was mediated by the phonemic MMN in young Chinese children. Findings underscore the key role of phonemic MMN for the underlying neurodevelopmental mechanism linking phoneme awareness and reading ability. |
Yu, Heeseung; Han, Eunkyoung People see what they want to see: an EEG study Journal Article In: Cognitive Neurodynamics, pp. 1–15, 2023. Abstract | Links | Tags: DSI-24 @article{yu2023people, This study explored selective exposure and confirmation bias in the choices participants made about which political videos to watch, and whether their political positions changed after they watched videos that either agreed with or opposed their positions on two controversial issues in South Korea: North Korea policy and social welfare policy. The participants completed questionnaires before and after they watched the videos, were asked to select thumbnails of videos before they watched any, and had their brain wave activity measured through electroencephalogram (EEG) as they watched both types of videos. The participants demonstrated selective exposure as they primarily selected video thumbnails with content that matched their political orientations, and they demonstrated confirmation bias as their questionnaire responses after they watched the videos indicated that their positions had hardened. There were also statistically significant differences in alpha, beta, sensory motor rhythm, low beta, mid beta, and fast alpha activity depending on the political orientation consistency between the participants and the videos. Future studies could expand this line of research beyond college students and beyond Asia, and longitudinal work could also be conducted to determine if the obtained patterns remain constant over time. |
Demarest, Phillip; Rustamov, Nabi; Swift, James; Xie, Tao; Adamek, Markus; Cho, Hohyun; Wilson, Elizabeth; Han, Zhuangyu; Belsten, Alexander; Luczak, Nicholas; others, A Novel Theta-Controlled Vibrotactile Brain-Computer Interface To Treat Chronic Pain: A Pilot Study Journal Article In: 2023. Abstract | Links | Tags: BCI, DSI-24, Neurofeedback @article{demarest2023novel, Limitations in chronic pain therapies necessitate novel interventions that are effective, accessible, and safe. Brain-computer interfaces (BCIs) provide a promising modality for targeting neuropathology underlying chronic pain by converting recorded neural activity into perceivable outputs. Recent evidence suggests that increased frontal theta power (4–7 Hz) reflects pain relief from chronic and acute pain. Further studies have suggested that vibrotactile stimulation decreases pain intensity in experimental and clinical models. This longitudinal, non-randomized, open-label pilot study's objective was to reinforce frontal theta activity in six patients with chronic upper extremity pain using a novel vibrotactile neurofeedback BCI system. Patients increased their BCI performance, reflecting thought-driven control of neurofeedback, and showed a significant decrease in pain severity and pain interference scores without any adverse events. Pain relief significantly correlated with frontal theta modulation. These findings highlight the potential of BCI-mediated cortico-sensory coupling of frontal theta with vibrotactile stimulation for alleviating chronic pain. |
Ferrisi, Leonardo M Optimizing an assistive Brain Computer Interface that uses Auditory Attention as Input Masters Thesis 2023. Abstract | Links | Tags: BCI, DSI-24 @mastersthesis{ferrisi2023optimizing, Brain Computer Interfaces (BCIs) allow individuals to operate technology using (typically consciously controllable) aspects of their brain activity. Auditory BCIs utilize principles of Auditory Event Related Potentials or Auditory Evoked Potentials as a reproducible controllable features that individuals can use to operate a BCI. These Auditory BCIs in their most basic format can allow users to answer yes or no questions by listening to either one auditory stimuli or the other. Current accuracy in intended response detection for these kinds of BCIs can be as good as mean accuracy of 77 % [5]. BCI research tends to optimize the computer side of the system however the ease of use for the human operating the system is an important point of consideration as well. This research project aimed to determine what factors make a human operator able to achieve the highest accuracy using a given previously successfully demonstrated classifier. This research project primarily sought to answer the questions; to what degree people can improve their accuracy in operating an Auditory BCI and what factors of the stimulus used can be altered to achieve this. The results of this project, obtained through the data collected from six individuals, found that slower stimuli speeds for eliciting Auditory Event Related Potentials were significantly better at achieving higher prediction accuracies compared to faster stimulus speeds. The amount of time spent using the system appeared to result in diminishing returns in accuracy regardless of condition however not before an initial spike in greater classifier prediction accuracy for the second condition run on each subject. Although further research is needed to gain more conclusive evidence for or against the hypothesis, the results of this research may be able suggest that individuals can improve their performance using Auditory BCIs with practice at optimal parameters albeit within a given time frame before experiencing diminishing returns. These findings would stand to provide benefit both to continued research in making optimal non-invasive alternative communication technologies as well as making progress in finding the potential ceiling in accuracy that an Auditory BCI can have in interpreting brain activity for the intended action of the user |
Maffei, Luigi; Masullo, Massimiliano Sens i-Lab: a key facility to expand the traditional approaches in experimental acoustics Journal Article In: Institute of Noise Control Engineering, vol. 266, no. 2, pp. 134–140, 2023. Abstract | Links | Tags: DSI-24 @article{maffei2023sens, Recent advances in developing new tools and miniaturised devices to measure, analyse, model and simulate existing or future projects are more and more influencing the way to investigate and solve problems of various disciplines fostering deep changes in the research paradigms toward human-centred, multisensory and multidisciplinary approaches. In acoustics, beyond the negative effect of noise on individuals and its mitigation, researchers are even more interested in investigating how the complexity of the multisensory environment modulates the individuals' holistic experience. To this aim, the Department of the Università degli Studi della Campania "Luigi Vanvitelli" has built the Sens i-Lab, a key facility integrating, in a single test room, the simulation and control of the physical environment (acoustics, vision, lighting, microclimate, IAQ) with advanced systems for simulation of virtual environments. To complement the simulation and control of the stimuli, the Sens i-Lab is equipped with a set of systems and devices for motion tracking, for the measurement of the biofeedback signals (EEG, EDA, HRV, VAF) and their association with environmental stimuli and self-reported psychological measures of people well-being. Taking advantage of the Sens i-Lab setting, new research fields and applications in acoustics are possible. Some of them are presented. |
Lim, Hyunmi; Jeong, Chang Hyeon; Kang, Youn Joo; Ku, Jeonghun Attentional State-Dependent Peripheral Electrical Stimulation During Action Observation Enhances Cortical Activations in Stroke Patients Journal Article In: Cyberpsychology, Behavior, and Social Networking, 2023. Abstract | Links | Tags: DSI-24, Stroke @article{lim2023attentional, Brain–computer interface (BCI) is a promising technique that enables patients' interaction with computers or machines by analyzing specific brain signal patterns and provides patients with brain state-dependent feedback to assist in their rehabilitation. Action observation (AO) and peripheral electrical stimulation (PES) are conventional methods used to enhance rehabilitation outcomes by promoting neural plasticity. In this study, we assessed the effects of attentional state-dependent feedback in the combined application of BCI-AO with PES on sensorimotor cortical activation in patients after stroke. Our approach involved showing the participants a video with repetitive grasping actions under four different tasks. A mu band suppression (8–13 Hz) corresponding to each task was computed. A topographical representation showed that mu suppression of the dominant (healthy) and affected hemispheres (stroke) gradually became prominent during the tasks. There were significant differences in mu suppression in the affected motor and frontal cortices of the stroke patients. The involvement of both frontal and motor cortices became prominent in the BCI-AO+triggered PES task, in which feedback was given to the patients according to their attentive watching. Our findings suggest that synchronous stimulation according to patient attention is important for neurorehabilitation of stroke patients, which can be achieved with the combination of BCI-AO feedback with PES. BCI-AO feedback combined with PES could be effective in facilitating sensorimotor cortical activation in the affected hemispheres of stroke patients. |
Seo, Seoung Won; Kim, Yong Seong Stroke Patients: Effects of Combining Sitting Table Tennis Exercise with Neurological Physical Therapy on Brain Waves Journal Article In: The Journal of Korean Physical Therapy, vol. 35, no. 1, pp. 19–23, 2023. Abstract | Links | Tags: DSI-24, Stroke @article{seo2023stroke, Purpose: The purpose of this study is to analyze the brain waves and develop various exercise programs to improve the physical and mental aspects of stroke patients when neurological physical therapy and sitting table tennis exercise are applied to stroke patients. Methods: In this study, an experiment was conducted on 15 patients diagnosed with stroke, and training was performed after changing the ping-pong table to a sitting position to apply ping-pong exercise to stroke patients. After training was conducted for 40 minutes twice a week for 4 weeks, brain waves were measured before and after. EEG was measured using Laxtha’s DSI-24 equipment as a measurement tool, and data values were extracted through the Telescan program. Results: Most of the relative beta waves showed a significant difference before and after the intervention. As for the characteristics of beta waves, this result can be seen as being highly activated during exercise or other activities. Conclusion: Ping-pong exercise in a sitting position is a good intervention method for stroke patients, and it can help to use it as basic data in clinical practice by showing brain activity. |
Chen, Sheng; Xie, Haiqun; Yang, Hongjun; Fan, Chenchen; Hou, Zengguang; Zhang, Chutian A Classification Framework Based on Multi-modal Features for Detection of Cognitive Impairments Journal Article In: Intelligent Robotics: Third China Annual Conference, CCF CIRAC 2022, pp. 349–361, 2023. Abstract | Links | Tags: Biomarker, DSI-24 @article{chen2023classification, Mild cognitive impairment (MCI) is the preliminary stage of dementia, and has a high risk of progression to Alzheimer’s disease (AD) in the elderly. Early detection of MCI plays a vital role in preventing progression of AD. Clinical diagnosis of MCI requires many examinations, which are highly demanding on hospital equipment and expensive for patients. Electroencephalography (EEG) offers a non-invasive and less expensive way to diagnose MCI early. In this paper, we propose a multi-modal fusion classification framework for MCI detection. We collect EEG data using a delayed match-to-sample task and analyze the differences between the two groups. Based on analysis results, we extract Power spectral density (PSD), PSD enhanced, Event-related potential (ERP) features in EEG signal along with physiological features and behavioral features of the subjects to classify MCI and healthy elderly. By comparing the effect of different features on classification performance, we find that the time-domain based ERP features are better than the frequency-domain based PSD or PSD enhanced features to overcome inter-individual differences to distinguish MCI, and these two features have good complementarity, fusing ERP and PSD enhanced features can greatly improve the classification accuracy to 84.74%. The final result shows that MCI and healthy elderly can be well classified by using this framework. |
Kambhamettu, Sudhendra; Cruz, Meenalosini Vimal; Anitha, S; Chakkaravarthy, S Sibi; Kumar, K Nandeesh Brain-Computer Interface-Assisted Automated Wheelchair Control Management--Cerebro: A BCI Application Journal Article In: Brain-Computer Interface: Using Deep Learning Applications, pp. 205–229, 2023. Abstract | Links | Tags: BCI, DSI-24 @article{kambhamettu2023brain, Technology today serves millions of people suffering from mobility impairments across the globe in numerous ways. Although advancements in medicine and healthcare systems improve the life expectancy of the general population, sophisticated engineering techniques and computing processes have long facilitated the patient in the recovery process. People struggling with mobility impairments and especially spine injuries which also leads to loss of speech, often have a narrow group of devices to aid them move from place-to-place and they are often limited to just movement functionality. BCI (Brain Computer Interface) powered wheelchairs leverage the power of the brain, i.e. translating the thoughts/neural activity into real-world movement providing automated motion without any third party intervention. Many BCI powered wheelchairs in the market are cumbersome to operate and provide only singular functionality of movement. To address this problem and improve the state of BCI products, Cerebro introduces the first ever go-to market product utilizing Artificial Intelligence to facilitate mobility features with built-in speech functionality via blink detection. Further sections of the Chapter take an in-depth look into each layer of the Cerebro system. |
2022 |
Dhaliwal, BS; Haddad, J; Debrincat, M; others, In: Correspondence: Peter Hurwitz, Clarity Science LLC, vol. 750, 2022. Abstract | Links | Tags: DSI-24, Neuromodulation @article{dhaliwal2022changes, Background: Globally, pain and pain-related diseases are the leading causes of disability and disease burden. In the United States, pain is the most common reason patients consult primary care providers. An estimated 100 million people live with chronic or recurrent pain. Existing pharmacological treatments for pain include anti-inflammatory agents, opioids, and other oral and topical analgesics. Many of these have been associated with troublesome and potentially harmful adverse effects. Understanding the complex pain neuromatrix may help in identifying alternative, non-invasive strategies and treatment approaches to address pain severity, interference, and improve patient outcomes. The neuromatrix of pain is a network of neuronal pathways and circuits responding to sensory (nociceptive) stimulation. Research has suggested that the output patterns of the body-self neuromatrix are responsible for causing or triggering perceptual, homeostatic, and behavioral programs following traumatic injury, other pathology, or chronic stress. As such, pain can be considered a product of the output of a widely distributed neural network within the brain instead of a sequential result of sensory inputs triggered by injury, inflammation, or other pathology. For over a century, the Brodmann Areas remain the most widely known and frequently cited cytoarchitectural organization of the human cortex. Certain Brodmann areas of the brain have been associated with the current understanding of the neuromatrix of pain. The areas expands well beyond the thalamus and anterior cingulate, and primary (S1) and secondary (S2) somatosensory cortices to include the midbrain region of the periaqueductal gray (PAG) and the lenticular complex as well as the insula, orbitofrontal (Brodmann's area [BA] 11, 47), prefrontal (BA 9, 10, 44-46), motor (BA 6, Supplementary motor area, and M1), inferior parietal (BA 39, 40), and anterior cingulate (BA 24, 25) cortices (ACCs). Treatments that are non-invasive and non-pharmacological and target both central and peripheral nociceptive mechanisms that are identified as having an impact on the Brodmann areas associated with the neuromatrix of pain may potentially be considered a beneficial pain management option for patients. Haptic vibrotactile trigger technology targets the nociceptive pathways and is theorized to disrupt the neuromatrix of pain. The technology has been incorporated into non-pharmacological patches and other non-invasive routes of delivery such as apparel (socks), braces, wristbands, and compression sleeves. The purpose of this minimal risk study was to compare electroencephalogram (EEG) patterns in areas of the brain that have been associated with the neuromatrix for pain in subjects wearing socks that were embedded with haptic vibrotactile trigger technology with those patients that wore socks that were not embedded with the technology. Methods: This IRB-approved study compared electroencephalogram (EEG) patterns in subjects wearing cloth socks embedded with haptic vibrotactile trigger technology (Superneuro VTT Enhanced Socks (Srysty Holding Co., Toronto, Canada) with those patients that wore cloth socks that were not embedded with the technology. Baseline EEG data from 19 scalp locations were recorded in sixty (60) adult subjects (36 females and 24 males) ranging from ages 14 to 83 wearing standard store-purchased cloth socks on their feet. The subject’s standard socks were then removed and replaced with the Superneuro VTT enhanced socks on the subject’s feet. A second EEG recording was then obtained. Both eyes-closed and eyes-open data were recorded. Results: The results showed statistically significant t-test differences (P < .01) in 59 out of 60 subjects in absolute power and 60 out of 60 subjects showed statistically significant differences in coherence and phase difference. The largest differences were in the alpha1 and beta2 frequency bands and especially in central scalp locations. Paired t-tests of LORETA current source densities between socks on and socks off demonstrated statistically significant differences in 60 out of 60 subjects. The largest effects of Superneuro VTT enhanced socks on were on the medial bank of the somatosensory cortex as well as in the left frontal lobes in the theta and alpha frequency. Conclusions: Study results indicate that foot stimulation with embedded haptic vibrotactile trigger technology showed significant modulation in the Brodmann areas that have been shown to be associated with the neuromatrix for pain in the human brain. Further research is suggested to evaluate if this technology has a positive impact on pain severity, pain interference, and quality of life and to be considered as a potentially beneficial pain management strategy and as part of a multi-modal treatment approach. |
Ocay, Don Daniel; Teel, Elizabeth F; Luo, Owen D; Savignac, Chloé; Mahdid, Yacine; Blain-Moraes, Stefanie; Ferland, Catherine E Electroencephalographic characteristics of children and adolescents with chronic musculoskeletal pain Journal Article In: PAIN Reports, vol. 7, no. 6, pp. e1054, 2022. Abstract | Links | Tags: Biomarker, DSI-24 @article{ocay2022electroencephalographic, Introduction: The pathophysiology of pediatric musculoskeletal (MSK) pain is unclear, contributing to persistent challenges to its management. Objectives: This study hypothesizes that children and adolescents with chronic MSK pain (CPs) will show differences in electroencephalography (EEG) features at rest and during thermal pain modalities when compared with age-matched controls. Methods: One hundred forty-two CP patients and 45 age-matched healthy controls (HCs) underwent a standardized thermal tonic heat and cold stimulations, while a 21-electrode headset collected EEG data. Cohorts were compared with respect to their EEG features of spectral power, peak frequency, permutation entropy, weight phase-lag index, directed phase-lag index, and node degree at 4 frequency bands, namely, delta (1–4 Hz), theta (4–8 Hz), alpha (8–13 Hz), and beta (13–30 Hz), at rest and during the thermal conditions. Results: At rest, CPs showed increased global delta (P = 0.0493) and beta (P = 0.0002) power in comparison with HCs. These findings provide further impetus for the investigation and prevention of long-lasting developmental sequalae of early life chronic pain processes. Although no cohort differences in pain intensity scores were found during the thermal pain modalities, CPs and HCs showed significant difference in changes in EEG spectral power, peak frequency, permutation entropy, and network functional connectivity at specific frequency bands (P < 0.05) during the tonic heat and cold stimulations. Conclusion: This suggests that EEG can characterize subtle differences in heat and cold pain sensitivity in CPs. The complementation of EEG and evoked pain in the clinical assessment of pediatric chronic MSK pain can better detect underlying pain mechanisms and changes in pain sensitivity. |
Chang, Won Kee; Lim, Hyunmi; Park, Seo Hyun; Lim, Chaiyoung; Paik, Nam-Jong; Kim, Won-Seok; Ku, Jeonghun Effect of Immersive Virtual Mirror Visual Feedback on Mu Suppression and Coherence in Motor and Parietal Cortex in Stroke Journal Article In: 2022. Abstract | Links | Tags: DSI-24, VR @article{chang2022effect, Background: This study aimed to investigate the activation pattern of the motor cortex (M1) and parietal cortex during immersive virtual reality (VR)-based mirror visual feedback (MVF) of the upper limb in patients with chronic stroke. Methods: Fourteen patients with chronic stroke with severe upper limb hemiparesis (Brunnstrom stage of hand 1-3) and 21 healthy controls were included. The participants performed wrist extension tasks with their unaffected wrists (or the dominant side in controls). In the MVF condition, the movement of the affected hand was synchronized with that of the unaffected hand. In contrast, only the movement of the unaffected hand was shown in the no-MVF condition. Electroencephalography was obtained during experiments with two conditions (MVF vs no-MVF). Mu suppression in the bilateral M1 and parietal cortex and mu coherence between the ipsilateral M1 and parietal cortex in each hemisphere and interhemispheric M1 were used for analyses. Results: In patients with stroke, MVF induced significant mu suppression in both the ipsilesional M1 and parietal lobes (p=0.006 and p=0.009, respectively), while significant mu suppression was observed in the bilateral M1 (p=0.003 for ipsilesional and p=0.041 for contralesional M1, respectively) and contralesional (contralateral hemisphere to the moving hand) parietal lobes in the healthy controls (p=0.036). The ipsilesional mu coherence between the M1 and parietal cortex in patients with stroke was stronger than that in controls regardless of MVF condition (p<0.001), while mu coherence between interhemispheric M1 cortices was significantly weaker in patients with stroke (p=0.032). Conclusion: In patients with stroke, MVF using immersive VR induces mu suppression in the ipsilesional M1 and parietal lobe. Our findings provide evidence of the neural mechanism of MVF using immersive VR and support its application in patients with stroke with severe hemiparesis. |
Rustamov, Nabi; Wilson, Elizabeth A; Fogarty, Alexandra E; Crock, Lara W; Leuthardt, Eric C; Haroutounian, Simon Relief of chronic pain associated with increase in midline frontal theta power Journal Article In: Pain Reports, vol. 7, no. 6, 2022. Abstract | Links | Tags: Biomarker, DSI-24 @article{rustamov2022relief, Introduction: There is a need to identify objective cortical electrophysiological correlates for pain relief that could potentially contribute to a better pain management. However, the field of developing brain biomarkers for pain relief is still largely underexplored. Objectives: The objective of this study was to investigate cortical electrophysiological correlates associated with relief from chronic pain. Those features of pain relief could serve as potential targets for novel therapeutic interventions to treat pain. Methods: In 12 patients with chronic pain in the upper or lower extremity undergoing a clinically indicated nerve block procedure, brain activity was recorded by means of electroencephalogram before and 30 minutes after the nerve block procedure. To determine the specific cortical electrophysiological correlates of relief from chronic pain, 12 healthy participants undergoing cold-pressor test to induce experimental acute pain were used as a control group. The data were analyzed to characterize power spectral density patterns of pain relief and identify their source generators at cortical level. Results: Chronic pain relief was associated with significant delta, theta, and alpha power increase at the frontal area. However, only midfrontal theta power increase showed significant positive correlation with magnitude of reduction in pain intensity. The sources of theta power rebound were located in the left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) and midline frontal cortex. Furthermore, theta power increase in the midline frontal cortex was significantly higher with chronic vs acute pain relief. Conclusion: These findings may provide basis for targeting chronic pain relief via modulation of the midline frontal theta oscillations. |
Woo, Hee-Soon; Song, Chiang-Soon Effects of Low Visual Acuity Simulations on Eye-Hand Coordination and Brainwaves in Healthy Adults Journal Article In: Physical Therapy Rehabilitation Science, vol. 11, no. 3, pp. 296–303, 2022. Abstract | Links | Tags: DSI-24 @article{woo2022effects, Objective: In general, macular degeneration, cataracts and glaucoma generally cause visual injury in clinical settings. This study aimed to examine the effects of low visual acuity simulations on hand manual dexterity function and brainwaves in healthy young adults. Design: Cross-sectional study design Methods: This study was an observational, cross-sectional study. Seventy healthy young adults participated in this study. To evaluate the effects of low visual acuity simulations on hand function and brain waves, this study involved four different visual conditions including (1) normal vision, (2) simulated cataracts, (3) simulated glaucoma, and (4) simulated macular degeneration. The hand function was measured to use the Minnesota manual dexterity test (MMDT), and the brainwaves was also measured to use the electroencephalography. Results: In hand function, placing and turning performance on the MMDT in the normal visual condition was significantly different than that in the cataract and macular degeneration conditions (p<0.05), and the placing performance was significantly differred in the normal condition than that in the simulated glaucoma. However, turning was not significantly different in the normal condition than that in the simulated glaucoma. The alpha, beta, and gamma waves did not significantly differ among the four visual conditions (p>0.05). Conclusions: The results suggest that limited visual information negatively affects the ability to perform tasks requiring arm-hand dexterity and eye-hand coordination. However, the effectiveness of low visual acuity on the brainwaves should be further studied for rehabilitative evidence of visual impairment. |
Miltiadous, Andreas; Aspiotis, Vasileios; Sakkas, Konstantinos; Giannakeas, Nikolaos; Glavas, Euripidis; Tzallas, Alexandros T An experimental protocol for exploration of stress in an immersive VR scenario with EEG Conference 2022 7th South-East Europe Design Automation, Computer Engineering, Computer Networks and Social Media Conference (SEEDA-CECNSM), IEEE 2022. Abstract | Links | Tags: DSI-24, VR @conference{miltiadous2022experimental, Stress is a subject always relevant to scientific research due to the numerous implications in human life. Typical biomarkers used in the physiological evaluation of stress include Electrocardiography, cortisol levels, galvanic skin response and other. Recently, one less widely used instrument for the assessment of stress that has been re-emerged due to advancements in computational power and machine learning techniques, is Electroencephalography. Moreover, as Virtual Reality HMDs are being rapidly adopted by the research community it becomes apparent that leveraging the offered advantages of VR for the exploration of stress can lead to novel controlable and reproducable experimental procedures. In this paper we combine EEG, ECG and the Perceived Stress Scale with a Virtual Reality phobia induction setting, to propose a protocol for assessing stress. The suggested protocol can be used for functional brain connectivity investigation and thus the evaluation of stress while it and can be expanded via the incorporation of machine learning algorithms for automatic stress level classification. |
Rominger, Christian; Gubler, Dani`ele A; Makowski, Lisa M; Troche, Stefan J In: International journal of psychophysiology, 2022. Abstract | Links | Tags: DSI-24 @article{rominger2022more, The neurophysiological investigation of creative idea generation is a growing research area. EEG studies congruently reported the sensitivity of upper alpha power (10-12 Hz) for the creative ideation process and its outcome. However, the majority of studies were between-subject design studies and research directly comparing the neurophysiological activation pattern when generating more and less creative ideas within a person are rare. Therefore, the present study was specifically focused on investigating brain activation patterns associated with the generation of more vs. less creative ideas. We applied an alternate uses task (AU-task; i.e., finding original uses for everyday objects such as a brick) in a sample of 74 participants and recorded the brain activation during the AU-task and reference period. A portable EEG system with 21 dry electrodes arranged in the international 10–20 system and linked ear as reference was used. We found a higher increase of upper alpha power during creative ideation (relative to reference period, i.e., task-related power, TRP) over right posterior sites when people generated more compared to less creative ideas. This was accompanied by an increase of functional coupling (i.e., task-related coherence increase) between frontal and parietal/occipital sites, which suggests higher internal attention and more control over sensory processes. Taken together, these findings complement the existing creativity research literature and indicate the importance of alpha power for the creative ideation process also within people. |
Hu, Yuxia; Wang, Yufei; Zhang, Rui; Hu, Yubo; Fang, Mingzhu; Li, Zhe; Shi, Li; Zhang, Yankun; Zhang, Zhong; Gao, Jinfeng; others, Assessing stroke rehabilitation degree based on quantitative EEG index and nonlinear parameters Journal Article In: Cognitive Neurodynamics, pp. 1–9, 2022. Abstract | Links | Tags: DSI-24, qEEG, Stroke @article{hu2022assessing, The assessment of motor function is critical to the rehabilitation of stroke patients. However, commonly used evaluation methods are based on behavior scoring, which lacks neurological indicators that directly reflect the motor function of the brain. The objective of this study was to investigate whether resting-state EEG indicators could improve stroke rehabilitation evaluation. We recruited 68 participants and recorded their resting-state EEG data. According to Brunnstrom stage, the participants were divided into three groups: severe, moderate, and mild. Ten quantitative electroencephalographic (QEEG) and five non-linear parameters of resting-state EEG were calculated for further analysis. Statistical tests were performed, and the genetic algorithm-support vector machine was used to select the best feature combination for classification. We found the QEEG parameters show significant differences in Delta, Alpha1, Alpha2, DAR, and DTABR (P < 0.05) among the three groups. Regarding nonlinear parameters, ApEn, SampEn, Lz, and C0 showed significant differences (P < 0.05). The optimal feature classification combination accuracy rate reached 85.3%. Our research shows that resting-state EEG indicators could be used for stroke rehabilitation evaluation. |
Won, Kyungho; Kim, Heegyu; Gwon, Daeun; Ahn, Minkyu; Nam, Chang S; Jun, Sung Chan Can Vibrotactile Stimulation and tDCS Help Inefficient BCI Users? Journal Article In: 2022. Abstract | Links | Tags: BCI, DSI-24, Neuromodulation @article{won2022can, Brain-computer interface (BCI) has helped people by enabling them to control a computer or machine through brain activity without actual body movement. Despite this advantage, BCI cannot be used widely because some people cannot achieve controllable performance. To solve this problem, researchers have proposed stimulation methods to modulate relevant brain activity to improve BCI performance. However, multiple studies have reported mixed results following stimulation, and comparative study of different stimulation modalities has been overlooked. Accordingly, this comparative study was designed to investigate vibrotactile stimulation and transcranial direct current stimulation’s (tDCS) effects on brain activity modulation and motor imagery BCI performance among inefficient BCI users. We recruited 44 subjects and divided them into sham, vibrotactile stimulation, and tDCS groups, and low performers were selected from each stimulation group. We found that the BCI performance of low performers in the vibrotactile stimulation group increased significantly by 9.13% (p=0.0053), and while the tDCS group subjects’ performance increased by 5.13%, it was not significant. In contrast, sham group subjects showed no increased performance. In addition to BCI performance, pre-stimulus alpha band power and the phase locking value (PLVs) averaged over sensory motor areas showed significant increases in low performers following stimulation in the vibrotactile stimulation and tDCS groups, while sham stimulation group subjects and high performers across all groups showed no significant stimulation effects. Our findings suggest that stimulation effects may differ depending upon BCI efficiency, and inefficient BCI users have greater plasticity than efficient BCI users. |
Michaelides, Andreas; Mitchell, Ellen Siobhan; Behr, Heather; Ho, Annabell Suh; Hanada, Grant; Lee, Jihye; McPartland, Sue Executive function-related improvements on a commercial CBT-based weight management intervention: Pilot randomized controlled trial Journal Article In: International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, vol. 19, 2022. Abstract | Links | Tags: DSI-24 @article{michaelides2022executive, Executive functioning is a key component involved in many of the processes necessary for effective weight management behavior change (e.g., setting goals). Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) and third-wave CBT (e.g., mindfulness) are considered first-line treatments for obesity, but it is unknown to what extent they can improve or sustain executive functioning in a generalized weight management intervention. This pilot randomized controlled trial examined if a CBT-based generalized weight management intervention would affect executive functioning and executive function-related brain activity in individuals with obesity or overweight. Participants were randomized to an intervention condition (N = 24) that received the Noom Weight program or to a control group (N = 26) receiving weekly educational newsletters. EEG measurements were taken during Flanker, Stroop, and N-back tasks at baseline and months 1 through 4. After 4 months, the intervention condition evidenced greater accuracy over time on the Flanker and Stroop tasks and, to a lesser extent, neural markers of executive function compared to the control group. The intervention condition also lost more weight than controls (−7.1 pounds vs. +1.0 pounds). Given mixed evidence on whether weight management interventions, particularly CBT-based weight management interventions, are associated with changes in markers of executive function, this pilot study contributes preliminary evidence that a multicomponent CBT-based weight management intervention (i.e., that which provides both support for weight management and is based on CBT) can help individuals sustain executive function over 4 months compared to controls |
Han, Chuanliang; Zhao, Xixi; Li, Meijia; Haihambo, Naem; Teng, Jiayi; Li, Sixiao; Qiu, Jinyi; Feng, Xiaoyang; Gao, Michel Enhancement of the neural response during 40 Hz auditory entrainment in closed-eye state in human prefrontal region Journal Article In: Cognitive Neurodynamics, pp. 1–12, 2022. Abstract | Links | Tags: DSI-24 @article{han2022enhancement, Gamma-band activity was thought to be related to several high-level cognitive functions, and Gamma ENtrainment Using Sensory stimulation (GENUS, 40 Hz sensory combined visual and auditory stimulation) was found to have positive effects on patients with Alzheimer’s dementia. Other studies found, however, that neural responses induced by single 40 Hz auditory stimulation were relatively weak. To address this, we included several new experimental conditions (sounds with sinusoidal or square wave; open-eye and closed-eye state) combined with auditory stimulation with the aim of investigating which of these induces a stronger 40 Hz neural response. We found that when participant´s eyes were closed, sounds with 40 Hz sinusoidal wave induced the strongest 40 Hz neural response in the prefrontal region compared to responses in other conditions. More interestingly, we also found there is a suppression of alpha rhythms with 40 Hz square wave sounds. Our results provide potential new methods when using auditory entrainment, which may result in a better effect in preventing cerebral atrophy and improving cognitive performance. |
Zeifman, Richard J; Spriggs, Meg J; Kettner, Hannes; Lyons, Taylor; Rosas, Fernando; Mediano, Pedro AM; Erritzoe, David; Carhart-Harris, Robin In: 2022. Abstract | Links | Tags: DSI-24 @article{zeifman2022relaxed, Background:The Relaxed Beliefs Under pSychedelics (REBUS) modelproposes that serotonergic psychedelics decrease the precision weighting of neurobiologically-encoded beliefs, and offers a unified account of the acute and therapeutic action of psychedelics. AlthoughREBUShas received some neuroscientific support, little research has examined its psychological validity. We conducted a preliminary examination of two psychological assumptions of REBUS: (a) psychedelics foster acute relaxation and post-acute revision of confidence in mental-health-relevant beliefs; (b) this relaxation and revision facilitatespositive therapeutic outcomesand is associated with the entropy of EEG signals(anindex of neurophysiological mechanisms relevant to REBUS). Method:Healthy individuals (N=11) were administered 1 mg and 25 mgpsilocybin4-weeks apart. Confidence ratings forpersonally held negative and positive beliefswere obtainedbefore, during, and 4-weeks after dosing sessions. Acute entropyand self-reported subjective experiences were measured, as was well-being (before and 4-weeks after dosing sessions). Results:Confidence in negative self-beliefsdecreased following 25 mgpsilocybin and not following 1 mgpsilocybin. Entropy and subjective effects under 25 mgpsilocybincorrelated with decreases in negative self-belief confidence(acute and4-weeks after dosing). Particularlystrong evidence was seen for a relationship between decreases in negative self-belief confidence and increases in well-beingat 4-weeks.Conclusions:We reportthe first empirical evidence that therelaxation and revision of negative self-belief confidencemediatespositive psychological outcomes; a psychological assumption ofREBUS. Replication within larger and clinical samples remains necessary. We also introduce a newmeasure, the Relaxed BEliefs Questionnaire (REB-Q),forexaminingthe robustness of these preliminary findingsand the utility of the REBUSmode |
Li, Jian; Maffei, Luigi; Pascale, Aniello; Masullo, Massimiliano Effects of spatialized water-sound sequences for traffic noise masking on brain activities Journal Article In: The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, vol. 152, no. 1, pp. 172–183, 2022. Abstract | Links | Tags: DSI-24 @article{li2022effects, Informational masking of water sounds has been proven effective in mitigating traffic noise perception with different sound levels and signal-to-noise ratios, but less is known about the effects of the spatial distribution of water sounds on the perception of the surrounding environment and corresponding psychophysical responses. Three different spatial settings of water-sound sequences with a traffic noise condition were used to investigate the role of spatialization of water-sound sequences on traffic noise perception. The neural responses of 20 participants were recorded by a portable electroencephalogram (EEG) device during the spatial sound playback time. The mental effects and attention process related to informational masking were assessed by the analysis of the EEG spectral power distribution and sensor-level functional connectivity along with subjective assessments. The results showed higher relative power of the alpha band and greater alpha-beta ratio among water-sound sequence conditions compared to traffic noise conditions, which confirmed the increased relaxation on the mental state induced by the introduction of water sounds. Moreover, different spatial settings of water-sound sequences evoked different cognitive network responses. The setting of two-position switching water brought more attentional network activations than other water sequences related to the information masking process along with more positive subjective feelings |
Kim, Min Gyu; Lim, Hyunmi; Lee, Hye Sun; Han, In Jun; Ku, Jeonghun; Kang, Youn Joo In: Journal of Neural Engineering, vol. 19, no. 3, 2022. Abstract | Links | Tags: BCI, DSI-24, Stroke @article{kim2022brain, Objective. Action observation (AO) combined with brain–computer interface (BCI) technology enhances cortical activation. Peripheral electrical stimulation (PES) increases corticospinal excitability, thereby activating brain plasticity. To maximize motor recovery, we assessed the effects of BCI-AO combined with PES on corticospinal plasticity. Approach. Seventeen patients with chronic hemiplegic stroke and 17 healthy subjects were recruited. The participants watched a video of repetitive grasping actions with four different tasks for 15 min: (A) AO alone; (B) AO + PES; (C) BCI-AO + continuous PES; and (D) BCI-AO + triggered PES. PES was applied at the ulnar nerve of the wrist. The tasks were performed in a random order at least three days apart. We assessed the latency and amplitude of motor evoked potentials (MEPs). We examined changes in MEP parameters pre-and post-exercise across the four tasks in the first dorsal interosseous muscle of the dominant hand (healthy subjects) and affected hand (stroke patients). Main results. The decrease in MEP latency and increase in MEP amplitude after the four tasks were significant in both groups. The increase in MEP amplitude was sustained for 20 min after tasks B, C, and D in both groups. The increase in MEP amplitude was significant between tasks A vs. B, B vs. C, and C vs. D. The estimated mean difference in MEP amplitude post-exercise was the highest for A and D in both groups. Significance. The results indicate that BCI-AO combined with PES is superior to AO alone or AO + PES for facilitating corticospinal plasticity in both healthy subjects and patients with stroke. Furthermore, this study supports the idea that synchronized activation of cortical and peripheral networks can enhance neuroplasticity after stroke. We suggest that the BCI-AO paradigm and PES could provide a novel neurorehabilitation strategy for patients with stroke. |
Kim, Nayeon; Gero, John S Neurophysiological Responses to Biophilic Design: A Pilot Experiment Using VR and EEG Unpublished 2022. Abstract | Links | Tags: DSI-24, VR @unpublished{kimneurophysiological, This pilot study explores the effects of biophilic design on university students’ neurophysiological responses in virtual classrooms through measuring relative alpha and beta power using EEG in two different display conditions: a conventional computer display and an immersive VR HeadMounted Display. Seventeen male undergraduate students from both a design major and a non-design major in their twenties at Yonsei University participated. Seven different biophilic design cases were presented as visual stimuli to participants in the two different conditions. Results of ANOVA analysis revealed significant main effects of condition and hemisphere in the relative alpha power. Results revealed there is significant interaction effect between case and major as well as between condition, case, hemisphere, and major in relative beta power. Results showed statistically significant differences in some electrodes of both relative alpha and relative beta measurements between some cases when presented in the computer display. In the VR presentation, differences were found only in the relative beta in some electrodes. This study has the potential to contribute to building evidencebased design strategies for improving biophilic design environments. |
Schneefeld, F; Doelling, K; Marchesotti, S; Schwartz, S; Igloi, K; Giraud, AL; Arnal, LH Salient 40 Hz sounds probe affective aversion and neural excitability Journal Article In: bioRxiv, 2022. Abstract | Links | Tags: Biomarker, DSI-24 @article{schneefeld2022salient, The human auditory system is not equally reactive to all frequencies of the audible spectrum. Emotional and behavioral reactions to loud or aversive acoustic features can vary from one individual to another, to the point that some exhibit exaggerated or even pathological responses to certain sounds. The neural mechanisms underlying these interindividual differences remain unclear. Whether distinct aversion profiles map onto neural excitability at the individual level needs to be tested. Here, we measured behavioral and EEG responses to click trains (from 10 to 250 Hz, spanning the roughness and pitch perceptual ranges) to test the hypothesis that interindividual variability in aversion to rough sounds is reflected in neural response differences between participants. Linking subjective aversion to 40 Hz steady-state EEG responses, we demonstrate that participants experiencing enhanced aversion to roughness also show stronger neural responses to this attribute. Interestingly, this pattern also correlates with inter-individual anxiety levels, suggesting that this personality trait might interact with subjective sensitivity and neural excitability to these sounds. These results support the idea that 40 Hz sounds can probe the excitability of non-canonical auditory systems involved in exogenous salience processing and aversive responses at the individual level. By linking subjective aversion to neural excitability, 40 Hz sounds provide neuromarkers relevant to a variety of pathological conditions, such as those featuring enhanced emotional sensitivity (hyperacusis, anxiety) or aberrant neural responses at 40 Hz (autism, schizophrenia). |
Haro, Stephanie; Rao, Hrishikesh M; Quatieri, Thomas F; Smalt, Christopher J EEG alpha and pupil diameter reflect endogenous auditory attention switching and listening effort Journal Article In: European Journal of Neuroscience, vol. 55, no. 5, pp. 1262–1277, 2022. Abstract | Links | Tags: DSI-24 @article{haro2022eeg, Everyday environments often contain distracting competing talkers and background noise, requiring listeners to focus their attention on one acoustic source and reject others. During this auditory attention task, listeners may naturally interrupt their sustained attention and switch attended sources. The effort required to perform this attention switch has not been well studied in the context of competing continuous speech. In this work, we developed two variants of endogenous attention switching and a sustained attention control. We characterized these three experimental conditions under the context of decoding auditory attention, while simultaneously evaluating listening effort and neural markers of spatial-audio cues. A least-squares, electroencephalography (EEG)-based, attention decoding algorithm was implemented across all conditions. It achieved an accuracy of 69.4% and 64.0% when computed over nonoverlapping 10 and 5-s correlation windows, respectively. Both decoders illustrated smooth transitions in the attended talker prediction through switches at approximately half of the analysis window size (e.g., the mean lag taken across the two switch conditions was 2.2 s when the 5-s correlation window was used). Expended listening effort, as measured by simultaneous EEG and pupillometry, was also a strong indicator of whether the listeners sustained attention or performed an endogenous attention switch (peak pupil diameter measure [ ] and minimum parietal alpha power measure [ ]). We additionally found evidence of talker spatial cues in the form of centrotemporal alpha power lateralization ( ). These results suggest that listener effort and spatial cues may be promising features to pursue in a decoding context, in addition to speech-based features. |
Gubler, Dani`ele A; Zeiss, Stephan; Egloff, Niklaus; Frickmann, Frank; Goetze, Benjamin; Harnik, Michael; Streitberger, Konrad; Troche, Stefan J; others, The effect of chronic pain on voluntary and involuntary capture of attention: An event-related potential study. Journal Article In: Behavioral neuroscience, vol. 136, no. 2, pp. 195, 2022. Abstract | Links | Tags: DSI-24 @article{gubler2022effect, Although the interrupting effect of chronic pain on voluntary-directed attention is well-documented, research on the impact of chronic pain on involuntary-directed attention remains incomplete. This study aimed to investigate the influence of chronic pain on involuntary as well as voluntary allocation of attention as, respectively, indexed by the P3a and P3b components in the event-related potential derived from the electroencephalogram. Both involuntary and voluntary captures of attention were compared between 33 patients with chronic pain and 33 healthy controls using an auditory three-stimulus oddball task (with standard, target, and unexpected distractor tones). The results revealed a reduced P3a amplitude as well as a reduced P3b amplitude in patients with chronic pain compared to healthy controls, indicating a detrimental effect of chronic pain on involuntary and voluntary attention, respectively. This study extends the picture of the impairing effects of chronic pain on attentional allocation to a current task and attentional allocation to information outside the focus of attention. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved) |
2021 |
Arakaki, Xianghong; Hung, Shao-Min; Rochart, Roger; Fonteh, Alfred N; Harrington, Michael G Alpha desynchronization during Stroop test unmasks cognitively healthy individuals with abnormal CSF Amyloid/Tau Journal Article In: Neurobiology of Aging, 2021. Abstract | Links | Tags: DSI-24 @article{arakaki2021alpha, Synaptic dysfunctions precede cognitive decline in Alzheimer's disease (AD) by decades, affect executive functions, and can be detected by quantitative electroencephalography (qEEG). We used qEEG combined with Stroop testing to identify changes of inhibitory controls in cognitively healthy individuals with an abnormal versus normal ratio of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) amyloid/total-tau. We studied two groups of participants (60-94 years) with either normal (CH-NAT or controls, n = 20) or abnormal (CH-PAT, n = 21) CSF amyloid/tau ratio. We compared: alpha event-related desynchronization (ERD), alpha spectral entropy (SE), and their relationships with estimated cognitive reserve. CH-PATs had more negative occipital alpha ERD, and higher frontal and occipital alpha SE during low load congruent trials, indicating hyperactivity. CH-PATs demonstrated fewer frontal SE changes with higher load, incongruent Stroop testing. Correlations of alpha ERD with estimated cognitive reserve were significant in CH-PATs but not in CH-NATs. These results suggested compensatory hyperactivity in CH-PATs compared to CH-NATs. We did not find differences in alpha ERD comparisons with individual CSF amyloid(A), p-tau(T), total-tau(N) biomarkers. |
Dong, Sunghee; Jin, Yan; Bak, SuJin; Yoon, Bumchul; Jeong, Jichai Explainable Convolutional Neural Network to Investigate Age-Related Changes in Multi-Order Functional Connectivity Journal Article In: Electronics, vol. 10, no. 23, pp. 3020, 2021. Abstract | Links | Tags: Cognitive-Algorithm, DSI-24 @article{dong2021explainable, Functional connectivity (FC) is a potential candidate that can increase the performance of brain-computer interfaces (BCIs) in the elderly because of its compensatory role in neural circuits. However, it is difficult to decode FC by the current machine learning techniques because of a lack of physiological understanding. To investigate the suitability of FC in BCIs for the elderly, we propose the decoding of lower- and higher-order FC using a convolutional neural network (CNN) in six cognitive-motor tasks. The layer-wise relevance propagation (LRP) method describes how age-related changes in FCs impact BCI applications for the elderly compared to younger adults. A total of 17 young adults (24.5±2.7 years) and 12 older (72.5±3.2 years) adults were recruited to perform tasks related to hand-force control with or without mental calculation. The CNN yielded a six-class classification accuracy of 75.3% in the elderly, exceeding the 70.7% accuracy for the younger adults. In the elderly, the proposed method increased the classification accuracy by 88.3% compared to the filter-bank common spatial pattern. The LRP results revealed that both lower- and higher-order FCs were dominantly overactivated in the prefrontal lobe, depending on the task type. These findings suggest a promising application of multi-order FC with deep learning on BCI systems for the elderly |
Arechavala, Rebecca Johnson; Rochart, Roger; Kloner, Robert A; Liu, Anqi; Wu, Daw-An; Hung, Shao-Min; Shimojo, Shinsuke; Fonteh, Alfred N; Kleinman, Michael T; Harrington, Michael G; others, In: International Journal of Psychophysiology, vol. 170, pp. 102–111, 2021. Abstract | Links | Tags: DSI-24 @article{arechavala2021task, Electroencephalographic (EEG) alpha oscillations have been related to heart rate variability (HRV) and both change in Alzheimer's disease (AD). We explored if task switching reveals altered alpha power and HRV in cognitively healthy individuals with AD pathology in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and whether HRV improves the AD pathology classification by alpha power alone. We compared low and high alpha event-related desynchronization (ERD) and HRV parameters during task switch testing between two groups of cognitively healthy participants classified by CSF amyloid/tau ratio: normal (CH-NAT, n = 19) or pathological (CH-PAT, n = 27). For the task switching paradigm, participants were required to name the color or word for each colored word stimulus, with two sequential stimuli per trial. Trials include color (cC) or word (wW) repeats with low load repeating, and word (cW) or color switch (wC) for high load switching. HRV was assessed for RR interval, standard deviation of RR-intervals (SDNN) and root mean squared successive differences (RMSSD) in time domain, and low frequency (LF), high frequency (HF), and LF/HF ratio in frequency domain. Results showed that CH-PATs compared to CH-NATs presented: 1) increased (less negative) low alpha ERD during low load repeat trials and lower word switch cost (low alpha: p = 0.008, Cohen's d = −0.83, 95% confidence interval −1.44 to −0.22, and high alpha: p = 0.019, Cohen's d = −0.73, 95% confidence interval −1.34 to −0.13); 2) decreasing HRV from rest to task, suggesting hyper-activated sympatho-vagal responses. 3) CH-PATs classification by alpha ERD was improved by supplementing HRV signatures, supporting a potentially compromised brain-heart interoceptive regulation in CH-PATs. Further experiments are needed to validate these findings for clinical significance. |
Jung, Mijung; Lee, Mikyoung The Effect of a Mindfulness-Based Education Program on Brain Waves and the Autonomic Nervous System in University Students Journal Article In: Healthcare 2021, vol. 9, no. 11, pp. 1606, 2021. Abstract | Links | Tags: DSI-24, Neurofeedback @article{jung2021effect, Background: Mindfulness, defined as the awareness emerging from purposefully paying attention to the present moment, has been shown to be effective in reducing stress and, thus, promoting psychological well-being. This study investigated the effects of a mindfulness-based education program on mindfulness, brain waves, and the autonomic nervous system (ANS) in university students in Korea. Methods: This study is a quantitative and experimental research with a single-group pre-post design. Six sessions of mindfulness-based intervention were applied. In total, 42 students completed a mindfulness questionnaire before and after the intervention, and 28 among them completed pre-intervention and post-intervention measures of brain waves and ANS. Results: The level of mindfulness increased in the participants after intervention. Regarding brain waves, the alpha and theta waves increased, but the beta waves decreased. There was no significant difference in the ANS, presenting no change in heart rate variability. Conclusions: We identified the positive effects of the mindfulness-based education program for university students. The findings indicate that this program may help students not only relax, but also generate a mindfulness state in stressful situations, potentially leading to a successful university life. This study can be used as a basis for quality improvement and sustainability of mindfulness-based education programs for university students. |
Seo, Ssang-Hee Derivation of EEG Spectrum-based Feature Parameters for Mental Fatigue Determination Journal Article In: Journal of Convergence for Information Technology, vol. 11, no. 10, pp. 10–19, 2021. Abstract | Links | Tags: Cognitive-Algorithm, DSI-24 @article{seo2021derivation, In this paper, we tried to derive characteristic parameters that reflect mental fatigue through EEG measurement and analysis. For this purpose, mental fatigue was induced through a resting state with eyes closed and performing subtraction operations in mental arithmetic for 30 minutes. Five subjects participated in the experiment, and all subjects were right-handed male students in university, with an average age of 25.5 years. Spectral analysis was performed on the EEG collected at the beginning and the end of the experiment to derive feature parameters reflecting mental fatigue. As a result of the analysis, the absolute power of the alpha band in the occipital lobe and the temporal lobe increased as the mental fatigue increased, while the relative power decreased. Also, the difference in power between resting state and task state showed that the relative power was larger than the absolute power. These results indicate that alpha relative power in the occipital lobe and temporal lobe is a feature parameter reflecting mental fatigue. The results of this study can be utilized as feature parameters for the development of an automated system for mental fatigue determination such as fatigue and drowsiness while driving. |
Chakravarty, Sumit; Xie, Ying; Le, Linh; Johnson, John; Hales, Michael Comparison Between Active and Passive Attention Using EEG Waves and Deep Neural Network Conference International Conference on Brain Informatics, vol. 12960, Springer 2021, ISBN: 978-3-030-86993-9. Abstract | Links | Tags: Cognitive-Algorithm, DSI-24 @conference{chakravarty2021comparison, A person’s state of attentiveness can be affected by various outside factors. Having energy, feeling tired, or even simply being distracted all play a role in someone’s level of attention. The task at hand can potentially affect the person’s attention or concentration level as well. In terms of students who take online courses, constantly watching lectures and conducting these courses solely online can cause lack of concentration or attention. Attention can be considered in two categories: passive or active. Conducting active and passive attention-based trials can reveal different states of attentiveness. This paper compares active and passive attention trial results of the two states, wide awake and tired. This has been done in order to uncover a difference in results between the two states. The data analyzed throughout this paper was collected from DSI 24 EEG equipment, and the generated EEG is processed through a 3D Convolutional Neural Network (CNN) to produce results. Three passive attention trials and three active attention trials were performed on seven subjects, while they were wide awake and when they were tired. The experiments on the preprocessed data results in accuracies as high as 81.78% for passive attention detection accuracy and 63.67% for active attention detection accuracy, which shown a clear ability to separate between the two attention categories. |
Lim, Hyunmi; Ku, Jeonghun Superior Facilitation of an Action Observation Network by Congruent Character Movements in Brain--Computer Interface Action-Observation Games Journal Article In: Cyberpsychology, Behavior, and Social Networking, vol. 24, no. 8, pp. 566–572, 2021. Abstract | Links | Tags: BCI, DSI-24 @article{lim2021superior, Action observation (AO) is a promising strategy for promoting motor function in neural rehabilitation. Recently, brain–computer interface (BCI)-AO game rehabilitation, which combines AO therapy with BCI technology, has been introduced to improve the effectiveness of rehabilitation. This approach can improve motor learning by providing feedback, which can be interactive in an observation task, and the game contents of the BCI-AO game paradigm can affect rehabilitation. In this study, the effects of congruent rather than incongruent feedback in a BCI-AO game on mirror neurons were investigated. Specifically, the mu suppression with congruent and incongruent BCI-AO games was measured in 17 healthy adults. The mu suppression in the central motor cortex was significantly higher with the congruent BCI-AO game than with the incongruent one. In addition, the satisfaction evaluation results were excellent for the congruent case. These results support the fact that providing feedback congruent with the motion of an action video facilitates mirror neuron activity and can offer useful guidelines for the design of BCI-AO games for rehabilitation |
Lin, Chun-Ling; Hsieh, Ya-Wen; Chen, Hui-Ya Age-related differences in alpha and beta band activity in sensory association brain areas during challenging sensory tasks Journal Article In: Behavioural Brain Research, vol. 408, pp. 113279, 2021. Abstract | Links | Tags: Biomarker, DSI-24 @article{lin2021age, Sensory challenges to postural balance are daily threats for elderly individuals. This study examined electroencephalography (EEG) in alpha and beta bands in sensory association areas during the Sensory Organization Test, involving withdrawal of visual or presenting misleading somatosensory inputs, in twelve young and twelve elderly participants. The results showed stepwise deterioration in behavioral performance in four conditions, with group effects that were amplified with combined sensory challenges. With eye closure, alpha and beta activities increased in all sensory association areas. Fast beta activity increased in the bilateral parietal-temporal-occipital areas. Misleading somatosensory information effects on EEG activity were of smaller amplitude than eye closure effects and in a different direction. Decreased alpha activity in left parietal-temporal-occipital areas and decreased beta and fast beta activities in bilateral parietal-temporal-occipital areas were significant. Elderly participants had increased fast beta activity in the left temporal-occipital and bilateral occipital areas, indicative of sustained efforts that they made in all sensory conditions. Similar to the young participants, elderly participants with eyes closed showed increased alpha activity, although to a smaller degree, in bilateral temporal-occipital and left occipital areas. This might indicate a lack of efficacy in redistributing relative sensory weights when elderly participants dealt with eye closure. In summary, EEG power changes did not match the stepwise deterioration in behavioral data, but reflected different sensory strategies adopted by young and elderly participants to cope with eye closure or misleading somatosensory information based on the efficacy of these different strategies. |
Fan, Chen-Chen; Xie, Haiqun; Peng, Liang; Yang, Hongjun; Ni, Zhen-Liang; Wang, Guanán; Zhou, Yan-Jie; Chen, Sheng; Fang, Zhijie; Huang, Shuyun; others, Group Feature Learning and Domain Adversarial Neural Network for aMCI Diagnosis System Based on EEG Conference 2021 International Conference on Robotics and Automation, 2021. Abstract | Links | Tags: DSI-24 @conference{fan2021group, Medical diagnostic robot systems have been paid more and more attention due to its objectivity and accuracy. The diagnosis of mild cognitive impairment (MCI) is considered an effective means to prevent Alzheimer's disease (AD). Doctors diagnose MCI based on various clinical examinations, which are expensive and the diagnosis results rely on the knowledge of doctors. Therefore, it is necessary to develop a robot diagnostic system to eliminate the influence of human factors and obtain a higher accuracy rate. In this paper, we propose a novel Group Feature Domain Adversarial Neural Network (GF-DANN) for amnestic MCI (aMCI) diagnosis, which involves two important modules. A Group Feature Extraction (GFE) module is proposed to reduce individual differences by learning group-level features through adversarial learning. A Dual Branch Domain Adaptation (DBDA) module is carefully designed to reduce the distribution difference between the source and target domain in a domain adaption way. On three types of data set, GF-DANN achieves the best accuracy compared with classic machine learning and deep learning methods. On the DMS data set, GF-DANN has obtained an accuracy rate of 89.47%, and the sensitivity and specificity are 90% and 89%. In addition, by comparing three EEG data collection paradigms, our results demonstrate that the DMS paradigm has the potential to build an aMCI diagnose robot system. |
Rustamov, Nabi; Sharma, Lokesh; Chiang, Sarah N; Burk, Carrie; Haroutounian, Simon; Leuthardt, Eric C Spatial and frequency-specific electrophysiological signatures of tonic pain recovery in humans Journal Article In: Neuroscience, vol. 465, pp. 23–37, 2021. Abstract | Links | Tags: Biomarker, DSI-24 @article{rustamov2021spatial, The objective of this study was to comprehensively investigate patterns of brain activities associated with pain recovery following experimental tonic pain in humans. Specific electrophysiological features of pain recovery may either be monitored or be modulated through neurofeedback (NF) as a novel chronic pain treatment. The cold pressor test was applied with simultaneous electroencephalogram (EEG) recording. EEG data were acquired, and analyzed to define: (1) EEG power topography patterns of pain recovery; (2) source generators of pain recovery at cortical level; (3) changes in functional connectivity associated with pain recovery; (4) features of phase-amplitude coupling (PAC) as it relates to pain recovery. The novel finding of this study is that recovery from pain was characterized by significant theta power rebound at the left fronto-central area. The sources of theta power over-recovery were located in the left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC), cingulate cortex, left insula and contralateral sensorimotor cortex. These effects were paralleled by theta band connectivity increase within hemispheres in a prefrontal–somatosensory network and interhemispherically between prefrontal and parietal areas. In addition, this study revealed significant reduction in PAC between theta/alpha and gamma oscillations during recovery period following tonic pain. These findings have largely been replicated across two identical sessions. Our study emphasizes the association between pain recovery and left lateral prefrontal theta power rebound, and significant over-recovery of functional connectivity in prefrontal-sensorimotor neural network synchronized at theta frequencies. These findings may provide basis for chronic pain treatment by modulating neural oscillations at theta frequencies in left prefrontal cortex. |
Kim, Sanghee; Park, Hyejin; Choo, Seungyeon Effects of Changes to Architectural Elements on Human Relaxation-Arousal Responses: Based on VR and EEG Journal Article In: International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, vol. 18, no. 8, pp. 4305, 2021. Abstract | Links | Tags: DSI-24, VR @article{kim2021effects, This study combines electroencephalogram (EEG) with virtual reality (VR) technologies to measure the EEG responses of users experiencing changes to architectural elements. We analyze the ratio of alpha to beta waves (RAB) indicators to determine the pre- and poststimulation changes. In our methodology, thirty-three females experience using private rooms in a postpartum care center participated in the experiment. Their brain waves are measured while they are experiencing the VR space of a private room in a postpartum care center. Three architectural elements (i.e., aspect ratio of space, ceiling height, and window ratio) are varied in the VR space. In addition, a self-report questionnaire is administered to examine whether the responses are consistent with the results of the EEG response analysis. As a result, statistically significant differences (p < 0.05) are observed in the changes in the RAB indicator values of the pre- and poststimulation EEG while the subjects are experiencing the VR space where the architectural elements are varied. That is, the effects of the changes to architectural elements on users’ relaxation-arousal responses are statistically verified. Notably, in all the RAB indicator values where significant differences are observed, the poststimulation RAB decreases in comparison to the prestimulus ratios, which is indicative of the arousal response. However, the arousal levels vary across the architectural elements, which implies it would be possible to find out the elements that could induce less arousal response using the proposed method. Moreover, following the experience in the VR space, certain lobes of the brain (F4 and P3 EEG channels) show statistically significant differences in the relaxation-arousal responses. Unlike previous studies, which measured users’ physiological responses to abstract and primordial spatial elements, this study extends the boundaries of the literature by applying the architectural elements applicable to design in practice |
Zhang, Dong Brain-Controlled Robotic Arm Based on Adaptive FBCCA Conference Human Brain and Artificial Intelligence: Second International Workshop, HBAI 2020, Held in Conjunction with IJCAI-PRICAI 2020, Yokohama, Japan, January 7, 2021, Revised Selected Papers, Springer Nature 2021. Abstract | Links | Tags: BCI, DSI-24 @conference{zhang2021brain, The SSVEP-BCI system usually uses a fixed calculation time and a static window stop method to decode the EEG signal, which reduces the efficiency of the system. In response to this problem, this paper uses an adaptive FBCCA algorithm, which uses Bayesian estimation to dynamically find the optimal data length for result prediction, adapts to the differences between different trials and different individuals, and effectively improves system operation effectiveness. At the same time, through this method, this paper constructs a brain-controlled robotic arm grasping life assistance system based on adaptive FBCCA. In this paper, we selected 20 subjects and conducted a total of 400 experiments. A large number of experiments have verified that the system is available and the average recognition success rate is 95.5%. This also proves that the system can be applied to actual scenarios. Help the handicapped to use the brain to control the mechanical arm to grab the needed items to assist in daily life and improve the quality of life. In the future, SSVEP’s adaptive FBCCA decoding algorithm can be combined with the motor imaging brain-computer interface decoding algorithm to build a corresponding system to help patients with upper or lower limb movement disorders caused by stroke diseases to recover, and reshape the brain and Control connection of limbs. |
Lim, Hyunmi; Ku, Jeonghun Effect of repetitive neurofeedback training on brain activation during hand exercise Conference 2021 9th International Winter Conference on Brain-Computer Interface (BCI), IEEE 2021, ISBN: 978-1-7281-8486-9. Abstract | Links | Tags: DSI-24, qEEG @conference{lim2021effect, In this study, we examined that neurofeedback training encouraging to make mu suppression over the motor cortex would effect on the brain activation of the motor cortex while performing hand movements. To investigate the effects of training with neurofeedback, we analyzed the pattern changes of the amount of the mu suppression during real hand movements just after every neurofeedback training. The healthy subjects were trained to increase the motor cortex activity by using motor imagery, specifically maximizing the difference of the mu power between C3 and C4 during neurofeedback training. We have observed that the changes of the mu suppression over the motor cortex become stronger as the neurofeedback training was repeated. These findings further suggest that motor imagery training using neurofeedback can be applied to patients with stroke or chronic neurological disorders. |
Eldeeb, Safaa; Susam, Busra T; Akcakaya, Murat; Conner, Caitlin M; White, Susan W; Mazefsky, Carla A Trial by trial EEG based BCI for distress versus non distress classification in individuals with ASD Journal Article In: Scientific Reports, vol. 11, no. 1, pp. 1–13, 2021. Abstract | Links | Tags: BCI, Biomarker, DSI-24 @article{eldeeb2021trial, Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is a neurodevelopmental disorder that is often accompanied by impaired emotion regulation (ER). There has been increasing emphasis on developing evidence-based approaches to improve ER in ASD. Electroencephalography (EEG) has shown success in reducing ASD symptoms when used in neurofeedback-based interventions. Also, certain EEG components are associated with ER. Our overarching goal is to develop a technology that will use EEG to monitor real-time changes in ER and perform intervention based on these changes. As a first step, an EEG-based brain computer interface that is based on an Affective Posner task was developed to identify patterns associated with ER on a single trial basis, and EEG data collected from 21 individuals with ASD. Accordingly, our aim in this study is to investigate EEG features that could differentiate between distress and non-distress conditions. Specifically, we investigate if the EEG time-locked to the visual feedback presentation could be used to classify between WIN (non-distress) and LOSE (distress) conditions in a game with deception. Results showed that the extracted EEG features could differentiate between WIN and LOSE conditions (average accuracy of 81%), LOSE and rest-EEG conditions (average accuracy 94.8%), and WIN and rest-EEG conditions (average accuracy 94.9%). |
Memmott, Tab; Koçanaoğullari, Aziz; Lawhead, Matthew; Klee, Daniel; Dudy, Shiran; Fried-Oken, Melanie; Oken, Barry BciPy: brain--computer interface software in Python Journal Article In: Brain-Computer Interfaces, pp. 1-18, 2021. Abstract | Links | Tags: BCI, DSI-24 @article{memmott2021bcipy, There are high technological and software demands associated with conducting Brain–Computer Interface (BCI) research. In order to accelerate the development and accessibility of BCIs, it is worthwhile to focus on open-source and community desired tooling. Python, a prominent computer language, has emerged as a language of choice for many research and engineering purposes. In this article, BciPy, an open-source, Python-based software for conducting BCI research is presented. It was developed with a focus on restoring communication using Event-Related Potential (ERP) spelling interfaces; however, it may be used for other non-spelling and non-ERP BCI paradigms. Major modules in this system include support for data acquisition, data queries, stimuli presentation, signal processing, signal viewing and modeling, language modeling, task building, and a simple Graphical User Interface (GUI). |
2020 |
Haar Millo, S; Faisal, A Brain Activity Reveals Multiple Motor-Learning Mechanisms in a Real-World Task Journal Article In: Frontiers in Human Neuroscience, vol. 14, pp. 354, 2020, ISBN: 1662-5161. Abstract | Links | Tags: DSI-24 @article{haarbrain, Many recent studies found signatures of motor learning in neural beta oscillations (13–30 Hz), and specifically in the post-movement beta rebound (PMBR). All these studies were in controlled laboratory-tasks in which the task designed to induce the studied learning mechanism. Interestingly, these studies reported opposing dynamics of the PMBR magnitude over learning for the error-based and reward-based tasks (increase vs. decrease, respectively). Here, we explored the PMBR dynamics during real-world motor-skill-learning in a billiards task using mobile-brain-imaging. Our EEG recordings highlight the opposing dynamics of PMBR magnitudes (increase vs. decrease) between different subjects performing the same task. The groups of subjects, defined by their neural dynamics, also showed behavioral differences expected for different learning mechanisms. Our results suggest that when faced with the complexity of the real-world different subjects might use different learning mechanisms for the same complex task. We speculate that all subjects combine multi-modal mechanisms of learning, but different subjects have different predominant learning mechanisms. |
Kim, Young-June; Park, Jin-Hong; Cho, Young-Suk; Kim, Keum-Sook In: Journal of Convergence for Information Technology, vol. 10, no. 8, pp. 203–212, 2020. Abstract | Links | Tags: DSI-24, VR @article{kim2020effect, The purpose of this study was to investigate the effects of cognitive rehabilitation programs using Virtual Reality(VR) content on the daily living abilities such as cognitive abilities, depression, and upper extremity functions of the elderly. The study group analyzed the effectiveness by separating the experimental group, which is the virtual reality cognitive rehabilitation application group, and the control group, the universal cognitive stimulation program application group. As a result of the study, the MMSE-K score improved by 13.0% in the experimental group and 2.3% in the control group. The improvement in each area of the experimental group was found to be 3.1% MBI, 7.1% MFT(Rt.), 3.5% MFT(Lt.), and 25.4% K-GDS. As a result of comparing the pre-post score change between each group, there was a significant difference between groups in daily living ability (p<.001) and MFT(Rt.)(p<.01). In addition, as a result of comparing the changes in absolute alpha waves to confirm the degree of depression through brain waves, there was no statistically significant difference. However, in the experimental group, it was confirmed that the average value increased to a positive value. This study is an experiment to verify the effectiveness of the cognitive rehabilitation program using virtual reality contents, and suggests a new intervention method to maintain and improve the daily life ability, cognitive function, depression and upper extremity function of the elderly. |
Lim, Hyunmi; Kim, Won-Seok; Ku, Jeonghun Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation Effect on Virtual Hand Illusion Journal Article In: Cyberpsychology, Behavior, and Social Networking, vol. 23, no. 8, pp. 541–549, 2020. Abstract | Links | Tags: DSI-24, Neuromodulation, Stroke, VR @article{lim2020transcranial, Virtual reality (VR) is effectively used to evoke the mirror illusion, and transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) synergistically facilitates this illusion. This study investigated whether a mirror virtual hand illusion (MVHI) induced by an immersive, first-person-perspective, virtual mirror system could be modulated by tDCS of the primary motor cortex. Fourteen healthy adults (average age 21.86 years ±0.47, seven men and seven women) participated in this study, and they experienced VR with and without tDCS—the tDCS and sham conditions, each of which takes ∼30 minutes—on separate days to allow the washout of the tDCS effect. While experiencing VR, the movements of the virtual left hand reflected the flexion and extension of the real right hand. Subsequently, electroencephalogram was recorded, the magnitude of the proprioceptive shift was measured, and the participants provided responses to a questionnaire regarding hand ownership. A significant difference in the proprioceptive shift was observed between the tDCS and sham conditions. In addition, there was significant suppression of the mu power in Pz, and augmentation of the beta power in the Pz, P4, O1, and O2 channels. The difference in proprioceptive deviation between the two conditions showed significant negative correlation with mu suppression over the left frontal lobe in the tDCS condition. Finally, the question “I felt that the virtual hand was my own hand” received a significantly higher score under the tDCS condition. In short, applying tDCS over the motor cortex facilitates the MVHI by activating the attentional network over the parietal and frontal lobes such that the MVHI induces more proprioceptive drift, which suggests that the combination of VR and tDCS can enhance the immersive effect in VR. This result provides better support for the use of the MVHI paradigm in combination with tDCS for recovery from illnesses such as stroke. |
Son, Ji Eun; Choi, Hyoseon; Lim, Hyunmi; Ku, Jeonghun In: Technology and Health Care, vol. 28, no. S1, pp. 509-519, 2020. Abstract | Links | Tags: BCI, DSI-24 @article{son2020development, BACKGROUND: This study focused on developing an upper limb rehabilitation program. In this regard, a steady state visual evoked potential (SSVEP) triggered brain computer interface (BCI)-functional electrical stimulation (FES) based action observation game featuring a flickering action video was designed. OBJECTIVE: In particular, the synergetic effect of the game was investigated by combining the action observation paradigm with BCI based FES. METHODS: The BCI-FES system was contrasted under two conditions: with flickering action video and flickering noise video. In this regard, 11 right-handed subjects aged between 22–27 years were recruited. The differences in brain activation in response to the two conditions were examined. RESULTS: The results indicate that T3 and P3 channels exhibited greater Mu suppression in 8–13 Hz for the action video than the noise video. Furthermore, T4, C4, and P4 channels indicated augmented high beta (21–30 Hz) for the action in contrast to the noise video. Finally, T4 indicated suppressed low beta (14–20 Hz) for the action video in contrast to the noise video. CONCLUSION: The flickering action video based BCI-FES system induced a more synergetic effect on cortical activation than the flickering noise based system. |
Wang, Jiahui; Antonenko, Pavlo; Keil, Andreas; Dawson, Kara Converging subjective and psychophysiological measures of cognitive load to study the effects of instructor-present video Journal Article In: Mind, Brain, and Education, vol. 14, no. 3, pp. 279–291, 2020. Abstract | Links | Tags: Cognitive-Algorithm, DSI-24 @article{wang2020converging, Many online videos feature an instructor on the screen to improve learners' engagement; however, the influence of this design on learners' cognitive load is underexplored. This study investigates the effects of instructor presence on learners' processing of information using both subjective and psychophysiological measures of cognitive load. Sixty university students watched a statistics instructional video either with or without instructor presence, while the spontaneous electrical activity of their brain was recorded using electroencephalography (EEG). At the conclusion of the video, they also self-reported overall load, intrinsic load, extraneous load, and germane load they experienced during the video. Learning from the video was assessed via tests of retention and transfer. Results suggested the instructor-present video improved learners' ability to transfer information and was associated with a lower self-reported intrinsic and extraneous load. Event-related changes in theta band activity also indicated lower cognitive load with instructor-present video. |
Mahdid, Yacine; Lee, Uncheol; Blain-Moraes, Stefanie Assessing the Quality of Wearable EEG Systems Using Functional Connectivity Journal Article In: IEEE Access, vol. 8, pp. 193214–193225, 2020, ISSN: 2169-3536. Abstract | Links | Tags: Comparisons, DSI-24 @article{mahdid2020assessing, Assessing the data quality of wearable electroencephalogram (EEG) systems is critical to collecting reliable neurophysiological data in non-laboratory environments. To date, measures of signal quality and spectral characteristics have been used to characterize wearable EEG systems. We demonstrate that these traditional measures do not provide fine-grained differentiation between the performance of four popular wearable EEG systems (the Epoc+, OpenBCI, DSI-24 and Quick-30 Dry EEG). Using two computationally inexpensive metrics of undirected functional connectivity (phase lag index) and directed functional connectivity (directed phase lag index), we compare the integrity of the phase relationships captured by wearable systems to those recorded from a high-density research-grade EEG system (Electrical Geodesics Inc). Our results demonstrate that functional connectivity analyses provide additional discriminatory information about wearable EEG systems, with clear differentiation of the cosine similarity between research-grade functional connectivity patterns and those generated by each wearable system. We provide a freely available Matlab toolbox containing all metrics described in this paper such that researchers and non-experts interested in wearable EEG systems can easily assess the quality of systems not characterized in this study, thus advancing the translation of EEG research into non-laboratory settings. |
Islam, Md Shafiqul; El-Hajj, Ahmad M; Alawieh, Hussein; Dawy, Zaher; Abbas, Nabil; El-Imad, Jamil EEG mobility artifact removal for ambulatory epileptic seizure prediction applications Journal Article In: Biomedical Signal Processing and Control, vol. 55, pp. 101638, 2020, ISSN: 1746-8094. Abstract | Links | Tags: Biomarker, DSI-24 @article{islam2020eeg, Mobile monitoring of electroencephalogram (EEG) signals is prone to different sources of artifacts. Most importantly, motion-related artifacts present a major challenge hindering the clean acquisition of EEG data as they spread all over the scalp and across all frequency bands. This leads to additional complexity in the development of neurologically-oriented mobile health solutions. Among the top five most common neurological disorders, epilepsy has increasingly relied on EEG for diagnosis. Separate methods have been used to classify EEG segments in the context of epilepsy while reducing the existing mobility artifacts. This work specifically devises an approach to remove motion-related artifacts in the context of epilepsy. The proposed approach first includes the recording of EEG signals using a wearable EEG headset. The recorded signals are then colored by some motion artifacts generated in a lab-controlled experiment. This stage is followed by temporal and spectral characterization of the signals and artifact removal using independent component analysis (ICA). The proposed approach is tested using real clinical EEG data and results showed an average increase in accuracy of ∼9% in seizure detection and ∼24% in prediction. |
2019 |
Choi, Hyoseon; Lim, Hyunmi; Kim, Joon Woo; Kang, Youn Joo; Ku, Jeonghun Brain computer interface-based action observation game enhances mu suppression in patients with stroke Journal Article In: Electronics, vol. 8, no. 12, pp. 1466, 2019. Abstract | Links | Tags: BCI, DSI-24, Stroke @article{choi2019brain, Action observation (AO), based on the mirror neuron theory, is a promising strategy to promote motor cortical activation in neurorehabilitation. Brain computer interface (BCI) can detect a user’s intention and provide them with brain state-dependent feedback to assist with patient rehabilitation. We investigated the effects of a combined BCI-AO game on power of mu band attenuation in stroke patients. Nineteen patients with subacute stroke were recruited. A BCI-AO game provided real-time feedback to participants regarding their attention to a flickering action video using steady-state visual-evoked potentials. All participants watched a video of repetitive grasping actions under two conditions: (1) BCI-AO game and (2) conventional AO, in random order. In the BCI-AO game, feedback on participants’ observation scores and observation time was provided. In conventional AO, a non-flickering video and no feedback were provided. The magnitude of mu suppression in the central motor, temporal, parietal, and occipital areas was significantly higher in the BCI-AO game than in the conventional AO. The magnitude of mu suppression was significantly higher in the BCI-AO game than in the conventional AO both in the affected and unaffected hemispheres. These results support the facilitatory effects of the BCI-AO game on mu suppression over conventional AO |
Apthorp, Deborah The drive to unlock the secrets of Parkinson's disease Online University of New England 2019, visited: 21.03.2019. Abstract | Links | Tags: Biomarker, DSI-24 @online{Apthorp2019, A team at the University of New England is moving closer - literally - to solving the mystery of how Parkinson's disease progresses, and rural Australians will soon play their part. |
Lim, Hyunmi; Ku, Jeonghun Multiple-command single-frequency SSVEP-based BCI system using flickering action video Journal Article In: Journal of Neuroscience Methods, vol. 314, pp. 21-27, 2019. Abstract | Links | Tags: BCI, DSI-24 @article{lim2019multiple, Background The number of commands in a brain–computer interface (BCI) system is important. This study proposes a new BCI technique to increase the number of commands in a single BCI system without loss of accuracy. New method We expected that a flickering action video with left and right elbow movements could simultaneously activate the different pattern of event-related desynchronization (ERD) according to the video contents (e.g., left or right) and steady-state visually evoked potential (SSVEP). The classification accuracy to discriminate left, right, and rest states was compared under the three following feature combinations: SSVEP power (19–21 Hz), Mu power (8–13 Hz), and simultaneous SSVEP and Mu power. Results The SSVEP feature could discriminate the stimulus condition, regardless of left or right, from the rest condition, while the Mu feature discriminated left or right, but was relatively poor in discriminating stimulus from rest. However, combining the SSVEP and Mu features, which were evoked by the stimulus with a single frequency, showed superior performance for discriminating all the stimuli among rest, left, or right. Comparison with the existing method The video contents could activate the ERD differently, and the flickering component increased its accuracy, such that it revealed a better performance to discriminate when considering together. Conclusions This paradigm showed possibility of increasing performance in terms of accuracy and number of commands with a single frequency by applying flickering action video paradigm and applicability to rehabilitation systems used by patients to facilitate their mirror neuron systems while training. |
Arakaki, Xianghong; Lee, Ryan; King, Kevin S; Fonteh, Alfred N; Harrington, Michael G Alpha desynchronization during simple working memory unmasks pathological aging in cognitively healthy individuals Journal Article In: PloS one, vol. 14, no. 1, pp. e0208517, 2019. Abstract | Links | Tags: Biomarker, DSI-24, qEEG @article{arakaki2019alpha, Our aim is to explore if cognitive challenge combined with objective physiology can reveal abnormal frontal alpha event-related desynchronization (ERD), in early Alzheimer’s disease (AD). We used quantitative electroencephalography (qEEG) to investigate brain activities during N-back working memory (WM) processing at two different load conditions (N = 0 or 2) in an aging cohort. We studied 60–100 year old participants, with normal cognition, and who fits one of two subgroups from cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) proteins: cognitively healthy (CH) with normal amyloid/tau ratio (CH-NAT, n = 10) or pathological amyloid/tau ratio (CH-PAT, n = 14). We recorded behavioral performances, and analyzed alpha power and alpha spectral entropy (SE) at three occasions: during the resting state, and at event-related desynchronization (ERD) [250 ~ 750 ms] during 0-back and 2-back. During 0-back WM testing, the behavioral performance was similar between the two groups, however, qEEG notably differentiated CH-PATs from CH-NATs on the simple, 0-back testing: Alpha ERD decreased from baseline only in the parietal region in CH-NATs, while it decreased in all brain regions in CH-PATs. Alpha SE did not change in CH-NATs, but was increased from baseline in the CH-PATs in frontal and left lateral regions (p<0.01), and was higher in the frontal region (p<0.01) of CH-PATs compared to CH-NATs. The alpha ERD and SE analyses suggest there is frontal lobe dysfunction during WM processing in the CH-PAT stage. Additional power and correlations with behavioral performance were also explored. This study provide pilot information to further evaluate whether this biomarker has clinical significance. |
2018 |
Camp, Marieke Van; Boeck, Muriel De; Verwulgen, Stijn; Bruyne, Guido De EEG Technology for UX Evaluation: A Multisensory Perspective Conference International Conference on Applied Human Factors and Ergonomics, vol. 775, Springer Advances in Intelligent Systems and Computing , 2018. Abstract | Links | Tags: Cognitive-Algorithm, DSI-24, Neuromarketing @conference{van2018eeg, Along with a growing interest in experience-driven design, interest in measuring user experience has progressively increased. This study explores the use of EEG for empirical UX evaluation. A first experimental test was conducted to measure and understand the effect of sensory stimuli on the user experience. A first experimental test was carried out with eight participants. A series of videos, eliciting positive and negative emotional responses, were presented to the participants. Subsequently, auditory stimuli were introduced and the effect on the user experience was evaluated using EEG measurements techniques and analysis software. After the tests the participants were questioned to verify whether the subjective results matched the objective measurements. |
Memmott, Tab; Eddy, Brandon; Dabiri, Sina; Erdogmus, Deniz; Fried-Oken, Melanie; Oken, Barry Automated and self-report measures of drowsiness over successive calibrations in a brain-computer interface for communication Journal Article In: Clinical Neurophysiology, vol. 129, pp. e61–e62, 2018. Abstract | Links | Tags: BCI, DSI-24 @article{memmott2018t154, Brain computer interfaces (BCI) generally require the user to maintain an attentive state. Potential end-users with severe speech and physical impairments may have limited communication abilities to report their current state, thus an automatic calculation of state may improve performance. It’s not yet known if an effective automatic calculation of drowsiness can be detected reliably in end-user populations or healthy controls. |
Arakaki, Xianghong; Shoga, Michael; Li, Lianyang; Zouridakis, George; Tran, Thao; Fonteh, Alfred N; Dawlaty, Jessica; Goldweber, Robert; Pogoda, Janice M; Harrington, Michael G Alpha desynchronization/synchronization during working memory testing is compromised in acute mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) Journal Article In: PloS one, vol. 13, no. 2, pp. e0188101, 2018. Abstract | Links | Tags: Biomarker, DSI-24 @article{arakaki2018alpha, Diagnosing and monitoring recovery of patients with mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) is challenging because of the lack of objective, quantitative measures. Diagnosis is based on description of injuries often not witnessed, subtle neurocognitive symptoms, and neuropsychological testing. Since working memory (WM) is at the center of cognitive functions impaired in mTBI, this study was designed to define objective quantitative electroencephalographic (qEEG) measures of WM processing that may correlate with cognitive changes associated with acute mTBI. First-time mTBI patients and mild peripheral (limb) trauma controls without head injury were recruited from the emergency department. WM was assessed by a continuous performance task (N-back). EEG recordings were obtained during N-back testing on three occasions: within five days, two weeks, and one month after injury. Compared with controls, mTBI patients showed abnormal induced and evoked alpha activity including event-related desynchronization (ERD) and synchronization (ERS). For induced alpha power, TBI patients had excessive frontal ERD on their first and third visit. For evoked alpha, mTBI patients had lower parietal ERD/ERS at the second and third visits. These exploratory qEEG findings offer new and non-invasive candidate measures to characterize the evolution of injury over the first month, with potential to provide much-needed objective measures of brain dysfunction to diagnose and monitor the consequences of mTBI. |
2017 |
Hunter, Aimee M; Nghiem, Thien X; Cook, Ian A; Krantz, David E; Minzenberg, Michael J; Leuchter, Andrew F In: Clinical EEG and Neuroscience, vol. 49, no. 5, pp. 306–315, 2017. Abstract | Links | Tags: Biomarker, DSI-24, Neuromodulation, qEEG @article{hunter2018change, Repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) has demonstrated efficacy in major depressive disorder (MDD), although clinical outcome is variable. Change in the resting-state quantitative electroencephalogram (qEEG), particularly in theta cordance early in the course of treatment, has been linked to antidepressant medication outcomes but has not been examined extensively in clinical rTMS. This study examined change in theta cordance over the first week of clinical rTMS and sought to identify a biomarker that would predict outcome at the end of 6 weeks of treatment. Clinically stable outpatients (n = 18) received nonblinded rTMS treatment administered to the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC). Treatment parameters (site, intensity, number of pulses) were adjusted on an ongoing basis guided by changes in symptom severity rating scale scores. qEEGs were recorded at pretreatment baseline and after 1 week of left DLPFC (L-DLPFC) rTMS using a 21-channel dry-electrode headset. Analyses examined the association between week 1 regional changes in theta band (4-8 Hz) cordance, and week 6 patient- and physician-rated outcomes. Theta cordance change in the central brain region predicted percent change in Inventory of Depressive Symptomology–Self-Report (IDS-SR) score, and improvement versus nonimprovement on the Clinical Global Impression–Improvement Inventory (CGI-I) (R2 = .38, P = .007; and Nagelkerke R2 = .78, P = .0001, respectively). The cordance biomarker remained significant when controlling for age, gender, and baseline severity. Treatment-emergent change in EEG theta cordance in the first week of rTMS may predict acute (6-week) treatment outcome in MDD. This oscillatory synchrony biomarker merits further study in independent samples. |
Mills, Caitlin; Fridman, Igor; Soussou, Walid; Waghray, Disha; Olney, Andrew M; D'Mello, Sidney K Put your thinking cap on: detecting cognitive load using EEG during learning Conference Proceedings of the Seventh International Learning Analytics & Knowledge Conference, 2017. Abstract | Links | Tags: Cognitive-Algorithm, DSI-24 @conference{mills2017put, Current learning technologies have no direct way to assess students' mental effort: are they in deep thought, struggling to overcome an impasse, or are they zoned out? To address this challenge, we propose the use of EEG-based cognitive load detectors during learning. Despite its potential, EEG has not yet been utilized as a way to optimize instructional strategies. We take an initial step towards this goal by assessing how experimentally manipulated (easy and difficult) sections of an intelligent tutoring system (ITS) influenced EEG-based estimates of students' cognitive load. We found a main effect of task difficulty on EEG-based cognitive load estimates, which were also correlated with learning performance. Our results show that EEG can be a viable source of data to model learners' mental states across a 90-minute session. |
2016 |
Halford, Jonathan J; Schalkoff, Robert J; Satterfield, Kevin E; Martz, Gabriel U; Kutluay, Ekrem; Waters, Chad G; Dean, Brian C Comparison of a Novel Dry Electrode Headset to Standard Routine EEG in Veterans Journal Article In: Journal of Clinical Neurophysiology, vol. 33, no. 6, pp. 530–537, 2016. Abstract | Links | Tags: Comparisons, DSI-24 @article{halford2016comparison, Objective: This purpose of this study was to evaluate the usefulness of a prototype battery-powered dry electrode system (DES) EEG recording headset in Veteran patients by comparing it with standard EEG. Methods: Twenty-one Veterans had both a standard electrode system recording and DES recording in nine different patient states at the same encounter. Setup time, patient comfort, and subject preference were measured. Three experts performed technical quality rating of each EEG recording in a blinded fashion using the web-based EEGnet system. Power spectra were compared between DES and standard electrode system recordings. Results: The average time for DES setup was 5.7 minutes versus 21.1 minutes for standard electrode system. Subjects reported that the DES was more comfortable during setup. Most subjects (15 of 21) preferred the DES. On a five-point scale (1—best quality to 5—worst quality), the technical quality of the standard electrode system recordings was significantly better than for the DES recordings, at 1.25 versus 2.41 (P < 0.0001). But experts found that 87% of the DES EEG segments were of sufficient technical quality to be interpretable. Conclusions: This DES offers quick and easy setup and is well tolerated by subjects. Although the technical quality of DES recordings was less than standard EEG, most of the DES recordings were rated as interpretable by experts. Significance: This DES, if improved, could be useful for a telemedicine approach to outpatient routine EEG recording within the Veterans Administration or other health system. |
Arakaki, Xianghong; Shoga, Michael; Li, Lianyang; Zouridakis, George; Rostami, Ramona; Goldweber, Robert; Harrington, Michael Exploring neuroplasticity in acute mild traumatic brain injury Journal Article In: The FASEB Journal, vol. 30, pp. 992–4, 2016. Abstract | Links | Tags: Biomarker, DSI-24 @article{arakaki2016exploring, Objectives To explore neuroplasticity in a longitudinal study of acute mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI). Methods We are using quantitative electroencephalography (qEEG) and magnetoencephalography (MEG) during the resting state and during cognitive brain stress to explore neuroplasticity in an ongoing acute mild traumatic brain injury research. Acute mTBI patients are recruited from the emergency department of Huntington Memorial Hospital in Pasadena, CA, and controls are non‐head‐trauma patients. Brain stress includes the N‐back (0‐back and 2‐back) working memory test and Color‐Word Interference Test (CWIT), administered using E‐prime software. Data were collected at three time points: within 1 week of injury, 14 days, and 30 days after injury. Behavioral as well as MEG and qEEG analysis are performed to compare the two groups. Results Resting MEG detected low frequency activity in the mTBI group, consistent with previous publications. N‐back, in particular during 2‐back trials, and CWIT, in particular during incongruent trials, both show initial executive function impairment that improved on later visits. Time frequency analysis suggested corresponding compromised brain activity. Conclusions The EEG/MEG recordings during rest and brain stress are objective and sensitive to neuroplasticity in acute mTBI, and could be potential objective mTBI markers. |
2015 |
Kang, Dayoon; Kim, Jinsoo; Jang, Dong-Pyo; Cho, Yang Seok; Kim, Sung-Phil Investigation of engagement of viewers in movie trailers using electroencephalography Journal Article In: Brain-Computer Interfaces, vol. 2, no. 4, pp. 193–201, 2015. Abstract | Links | Tags: BCI, DSI-24, Neuromarketing @article{kang2015investigation, Brain-computer interfaces (BCIs) have been focused on providing direct communications to the disabled. Recently, BCI researchers have expanded BCI applications to non-medical uses and categorized them as active BCI, reactive BCI, and passive BCI. Neurocinematics, a new application of reactive BCIs, aims to understand viewers’ cognitive and affective responses to movies from neural activity, providing more objective information than traditional subjective self-reports. However, studies on analytical indices for neurocinematics have verified their indices by comparisons with self-reports. To overcome this contradictory issue, we proposed using an independent psychophysical index to evaluate a neural engagement index (NEI). We made use of the secondary task reaction time (STRT), which measures participants’ engagement in a primary task by their reaction time to a secondary task; here, responding to a tactile stimulus was the secondary task and watching a movie trailer was the primary task. NEI was developed as changes in the difference between frontal beta and alpha activity of EEG. We evaluated movie trailers using NEI, STRT, and self-reports and found a significant correlation between STRT and NEI across trailers but no correlation between any of the self-report results and STRT or NEI. Our results suggest that NEI developed for neurocinematics may conform well with more objective psychophysical assessments but not with subjective self-reports. |
Li, Lianyang; Pagnotta, Mattia F; Arakaki, Xianghong; Tran, Thao; Strickland, David; Harrington, Michael; Zouridakis, George Brain activation profiles in mTBI: Evidence from combined resting-state EEG and MEG activity Conference 2015 37th Annual International Conference of the IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society (EMBC), IEEE IEEE, Milan, Italy, 2015, ISSN: 1558-4615. Abstract | Links | Tags: Biomarker, DSI-24 @conference{li2015brain, In this study, we compared the brain activation profiles obtained from resting state Electroencephalographic (EEG) and Magnetoencephalographic (MEG) activity in six mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) patients and five orthopedic controls, using power spectral density (PSD) analysis. We first estimated intracranial dipolar EEG/MEG sources on a dense grid on the cortical surface and then projected these sources on a standardized atlas with 68 regions of interest (ROIs). Averaging the PSD values of all sources in each ROI across all control subjects resulted in a normative database that was used to convert the PSD values of mTBI patients into z-scores in eight distinct frequency bands. We found that mTBI patients exhibited statistically significant overactivation in the delta, theta, and low alpha bands. Additionally, the MEG modality seemed to better characterize the group of individual subjects. These findings suggest that resting-state EEG/MEG activation maps may be used as specific biomarkers that can help with the diagnosis of and assess the efficacy of intervention in mTBI patients. |
2014 |
Hairston, David W; Whitaker, Keith W; Ries, Anthony J; Vettel, Jean M; Bradford, Cortney J; Kerick, Scott E; McDowell, Kaleb Usability of four commercially-oriented EEG systems Journal Article In: Journal of Neural Engineering, vol. 11, no. 4, pp. 046018, 2014. Abstract | Links | Tags: Comparisons, DSI-24 @article{hairston2014usability, Electroencephalography (EEG) holds promise as a neuroimaging technology that can be used to understand how the human brain functions in real-world, operational settings while individuals move freely in perceptually-rich environments. In recent years, several EEG systems have been developed that aim to increase the usability of the neuroimaging technology in real-world settings. Here, the usability of three wireless EEG systems from different companies are compared to a conventional wired EEG system, BioSemi's ActiveTwo, which serves as an established laboratory-grade 'gold standard' baseline. The wireless systems compared include Advanced Brain Monitoring's B-Alert X10, Emotiv Systems' EPOC and the 2009 version of QUASAR's Dry Sensor Interface 10–20. The design of each wireless system is discussed in relation to its impact on the system's usability as a potential real-world neuroimaging system. Evaluations are based on having participants complete a series of cognitive tasks while wearing each of the EEG acquisition systems. This report focuses on the system design, usability factors and participant comfort issues that arise during the experimental sessions. In particular, the EEG systems are assessed on five design elements: adaptability of the system for differing head sizes, subject comfort and preference, variance in scalp locations for the recording electrodes, stability of the electrical connection between the scalp and electrode, and timing integration between the EEG system, the stimulus presentation computer and other external events. |
2012 |
Soussou, Walid; Rooksby, Michael; Forty, Charles; Weatherhead, James; Marshall, Sandra EEG and eye-tracking based measures for enhanced training Conference 2012 Annual International Conference of the IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society, IEEE 2012, ISSN: 1557-170X. Abstract | Links | Tags: Cognitive-Algorithm, DSI-24, Eye-Tracking @conference{soussou2012eeg, This paper describes a project whose goal was to establish the feasibility of using unobtrusive cognitive assessment methodologies in order to optimize efficiency and expediency of training. QUASAR, EyeTracking, Inc. (ETI), and Safe Passage International (SPI), teamed to demonstrate correlation between EEG and eye-tracking based cognitive workload, performance assessment and subject expertise on XRay screening tasks. Results indicate significant correlation between cognitive workload metrics based on EEG and eye-tracking measurements recorded during a simulated baggage screening task and subject expertise and error rates in that same task. These results suggest that cognitive monitoring could be useful in improving training efficiency by enabling training paradigms that adapts to increasing expertise. |
2010 |
Estepp, Justin R; Monnin, Jason W; Christensen, James C; Wilson, Glenn F Evaluation of a Dry Electrode System for Electroencephalography: Applications for Psychophysiological Cognitive Workload Assessment Journal Article In: vol. 54, no. 3, pp. 210–214, 2010. Abstract | Links | Tags: Cognitive-Algorithm, Comparisons, DSI-24 @article{estepp2010evaluation, Advances in state-of-the-art dry electrode technology have led to the development of a novel dry electrode system for electroencephalography (QUASAR, Inc.; San Diego, California, USA). While basic systems-level testing and comparison of this dry electrode system to conventional wet electrode systems has proved to be very favorable, very limited data has been collected that demonstrates the ability of QUASAR's dry electrode system to replicate results produced in more applied, dynamic testing environments that may be used for human factors applications. In this study, QUASAR's dry electrode headset was used in combination with traditional wet electrodes to determine the ability of the dry electrode system to accurately differentiate between varying levels of cognitive workload. Results show that the accuracy in cognitive workload assessment obtained with wet electrodes is comparable to that obtained with the dry electrodes. |
Antonenko, Pavlo; Paas, Fred; Grabner, Roland; Gog, Tamara Van Using Electroencephalography to Measure Cognitive Load Journal Article In: Educational Psychology Review, vol. 22, no. 4, pp. 425–438, 2010. Abstract | Links | Tags: DSI-24 @article{antonenko2010using, Application of physiological methods, in particular electroencephalography (EEG), offers new and promising approaches to educational psychology research. EEG is identified as a physiological index that can serve as an online, continuous measure of cognitive load detecting subtle fluctuations in instantaneous load, which can help explain effects of instructional interventions when measures of overall cognitive load fail to reflect such differences in cognitive processing. This paper presents a review of seminal literature on the use of continuous EEG to measure cognitive load and describes two case studies on learning from hypertext and multimedia that employed EEG methodology to collect and analyze cognitive load data. |
Fielder, James Electroencephalogram (EEG) Study of Learning Effects across Addition Problems Technical Report PEBL Technical Report Series 2010. Links | Tags: Cognitive-Algorithm, DSI-24 @techreport{fielder2010electroencephalogram, |
2024 |
Jeong, Chang Hyeon; Lim, Hyunmi; Lee, Jiye; Lee, Hye Sun; Ku, Jeonghun; Kang, Youn Joo In: Frontiers in Neuroscience, vol. 18, pp. 1373589, 2024. @article{jeong2024attentional, Introduction: Brain computer interface-based action observation (BCI-AO) is a promising technique in detecting the user's cortical state of visual attention and providing feedback to assist rehabilitation. Peripheral nerve electrical stimulation (PES) is a conventional method used to enhance outcomes in upper extremity function by increasing activation in the motor cortex. In this study, we examined the effects of different pairings of peripheral nerve electrical stimulation (PES) during BCI-AO tasks and their impact on corticospinal plasticity. Materials and methods: Our innovative BCI-AO interventions decoded user's attentive watching during task completion. This process involved providing rewarding visual cues while simultaneously activating afferent pathways through PES. Fifteen stroke patients were included in the analysis. All patients underwent a 15 min BCI-AO program under four different experimental conditions: BCI-AO without PES, BCI-AO with continuous PES, BCI-AO with triggered PES, and BCI-AO with reverse PES application. PES was applied at the ulnar nerve of the wrist at an intensity equivalent to 120% of the sensory threshold and a frequency of 50 Hz. The experiment was conducted randomly at least 3 days apart. To assess corticospinal and peripheral nerve excitability, we compared pre and post-task (post 0, post 20 min) parameters of motor evoked potential and F waves under the four conditions in the muscle of the affected hand.The findings indicated that corticospinal excitability in the affected hemisphere was higher when PES was synchronously applied with AO training, using BCI during a state of attentive watching. In contrast, there was no effect on corticospinal activation when PES was applied continuously or in the reverse manner. This paradigm promoted corticospinal plasticity for up to 20 min after task completion. Importantly, the effect was more evident in patients over 65 years of age.The results showed that task-driven corticospinal plasticity was higher when PES was applied synchronously with a highly attentive brain state during the action observation task, compared to continuous or asynchronous application. This study provides insight into how optimized BCI technologies dependent on brain state used in conjunction with other rehabilitation training could enhance treatment-induced neural plasticity. |
Li, Jian; Masullo, Massimiliano; Maffei, Luigi; Pascale, Aniello; Chau, Chi-kwan; Lin, Minqi In: Applied Acoustics, vol. 218, pp. 109904, 2024. @article{li2024improving, According with soundscape strategies to improve the perception of the sound environment, laboratory studies have proven that introducing water sounds into urban spaces can be both an effective strategy for the informational-attentional masking of road traffic noise, and restorativeness creation. To extend previous laboratory findings and test the effectiveness and applicability of different spatial variations of water sounds in urban parks, a sound installation was prepared, and an experiment was conducted. Three different position-varied water-sound sequences were augmented into an existing University campus green park through surround sound design method with four Bluetooth loudspeakers. The mental effects and attention process were assessed by analyzing the EEG signals including aperiodic, oscillatory components and sensor-level functional connectivity, along with psychological scales. The water sounds played in-situ, brought more visual processing related to spatial attention and stimulus-driven salience. And the changes in the alpha band and the related theta/alpha ratio among four conditions showed more relaxation state induced by the introduction of water sounds, consistent with the positive effects on emotion saliency and perceived restorativeness. Moreover, different spatial variations of water sounds, especially for the two-position switching setting, modulated the activity of the attentional network related to the restoration process via the alpha-theta synchronization. |
Kim, Sanghee; Ryu, Jihye; Lee, Yujeong; Park, Hyejin; Lee, Kweonhyoung In: Buildings, vol. 14, no. 1, pp. 237, 2024. @article{kim2024methods, We propose a technique that allows designers to develop energy-efficient buildings focused on occupants from the early design stage. The technique integrates the physiological responses of occupants and the energy performance of buildings. Among the architectural design elements, we considered the aspect ratio, ceiling height, and window-to-wall ratio as design variables and created 30 design alternatives for a single-occupancy room in a postpartum care center. These design alternatives were recreated in virtual reality, allowing 33 female participants to immerse themselves in the designed rooms. During the experiment, we collected electroencephalography (EEG) data from the participants. Furthermore, we used DesignBuilder to simulate 30 design alternatives and calculated the primary energy consumption per unit area for each alternative. By integrating the EEG data and energy performance analysis, we identified the design alternative among the 30 options that positively influenced the physiological responses of occupants while also being energy efficient. The selected alternative was designed with an aspect ratio of 1:1.6, a ceiling height of 2.3 m, and a window-to-wall ratio of 60%. This research represents a creative exploration that demonstrates how studies combining human physiological responses and architecture can evolve through integration with other subjects. Our findings provide a robust framework to explore the relationship between physiological responses and energy optimization for detailed architectural design elements. |
2023 |
Park, Jaeyoung; Wang, Soyoung; Lee, Seungji; Seo, Seungbeom; Lee, Nayoung; Kim, Seongcheol Viewer Emotional Response to Webtoon-Based Drama: An EEG Analysis Journal Article In: International Journal of Human–Computer Interaction, pp. 1–15, 2023. @article{park2023viewer, Amidst entertainment market uncertainties, cross-medium content extension has emerged as a powerful strategy. Webtoons, digital cartoons, stand out as significant resources. However, limited research has delved into effective strategies for extending these narratives. Acknowledging the crucial role of evoking viewer emotions in content success, this study investigates viewer emotional responses. Departing from conventional methods, we employ neuroscientific measurement—specifically, electroencephalography (EEG)—to capture real-time viewer emotions during content consumption, assessing valence and arousal. We examine the impact of webtoon-drama similarity on viewer emotions and scene attributes that heighten emotional responses. By integrating EEG data, interview insights, and scene analysis, our findings underscore intensified emotions when drama scenes mirror webtoon elements, particularly in sets and directing. Effective replication relies on drama-specific attributes such as choreography, original soundtracks, and casting. This study contributes academically by using EEG to evaluate webtoons’ value as original sources and practically by offering concrete webtoon extension strategy. |
Liu, F.; Yang, P.; Shu, Y.; Liu, N.; Sheng, J.; Luo, J.; Wang, X.; Liu, Y. Emotion Recognition from Few-Channel EEG Signals by Integrating Deep Feature Aggregation and Transfer Learning Journal Article In: IEEE Transactions on Affective Computing, no. 01, pp. 1-17, 2023, ISSN: 1949-3045. @article{10328701, Electroencephalogram (EEG) signals have been widely studied in human emotion recognition. The majority of existing EEG emotion recognition algorithms utilize dozens or hundreds of electrodes covering the whole scalp region (denoted as full-channel EEG devices in this paper). Nowadays, more and more portable and miniature EEG devices with only a few electrodes (denoted as few-channel EEG devices in this paper) are emerging. However, emotion recognition from few-channel EEG data is challenging because the device can only capture EEG signals from a portion of the brain area. Moreover, existing full-channel algorithms cannot be directly adapted to few-channel EEG signals due to the significant inter-variation between full-channel and few-channel EEG devices. To address these challenges, we propose a novel few-channel EEG emotion recognition framework from the perspective of knowledge transfer. We leverage full-channel EEG signals to provide supplementary information for few-channel signals via a transfer learning-based model CD-EmotionNet, which consists of a base emotion model for efficient emotional feature extraction and a cross-device transfer learning strategy. This strategy helps to enhance emotion recognition performance on few-channel EEG data by utilizing knowledge learned from full-channel EEG data. To evaluate our cross-device EEG emotion transfer learning framework, we construct an emotion dataset containing paired 18-channel and 5-channel EEG signals from 25 subjects, as well as 5-channel EEG signals from 13 other subjects. Extensive experiments show that our framework outperforms state-of-the-art EEG emotion recognition methods by a large margin. |
Chan, Melody MY; Choi, Coco XT; Tsoi, Tom CW; Shea, Caroline KS; Yiu, Klaire WK; Han, Yvonne MY In: Brain Stimulation, vol. 16, iss. 8, pp. P1604-1616, 2023. @article{chan2023effects, Background Few treatment options are available for targeting core symptoms of autism spectrum disorder (ASD). The development of treatments that target common neural circuit dysfunctions caused by known genetic defects, namely, disruption of the excitation/inhibition (E/I) balance, is promising. Transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) is capable of modulating the E/I balance in healthy individuals, yet its clinical and neurobiological effects in ASD remain elusive. Objective This double-blind, randomized, sham-controlled trial investigated the effects of multisession cathodal prefrontal tDCS coupled with online cognitive remediation on social functioning, information processing efficiency and the E/I balance in ASD patients aged 14–21 years. Methods Sixty individuals were randomly assigned to receive either active or sham tDCS (10 sessions in total, 20 min/session, stimulation intensity: 1.5 mA, cathode: F3, anode: Fp2, size of electrodes: 25 cm2) combined with 20 min of online cognitive remediation. Social functioning, information processing efficiency during cognitive tasks, and theta- and gamma-band E/I balance were measured one day before and after the treatment. Results Compared to sham tDCS, active cathodal tDCS was effective in enhancing overall social functioning [F(1, 58) = 6.79, p = .012, ηp2 = 0.105, 90% CI: (0.013, 0.234)] and information processing efficiency during cognitive tasks [F(1, 58) = 10.07, p = .002, ηp2 = 0.148, 90% CI: (0.034, 0.284)] in these individuals. Electroencephalography data showed that this cathodal tDCS protocol was effective in reducing the theta-band E/I ratio of the cortical midline structures [F(1, 58) = 4.65, p = .035, ηp2 = 0.074, 90% CI: (0.010, 0.150)] and that this reduction significantly predicted information processing efficiency enhancement (b = −2.546, 95% BCa CI: [-4.979, −0.113], p = .041). Conclusion Our results support the use of multisession cathodal tDCS over the left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex combined with online cognitive remediation for reducing the elevated theta-band E/I ratio in sociocognitive information processing circuits in ASD patients, resulting in more adaptive regulation of global brain dynamics that is associated with enhanced information processing efficiency after the intervention. |
Mizrahi, Dor; Laufer, Ilan; Zuckerman, Inon Modulation of Beta Power as a Function of Attachment Style and Feedback Valence Conference International Conference on Brain Informatics, Springer 2023. @conference{mizrahi2023modulation, Attachment theory is concerned with the basic level of social connection associated with approach and withdrawal mechanisms. Consistent patterns of attachment may be divided into two major categories: secure and insecure. As secure and insecure attachment style individuals vary in terms of their responses to affective stimuli and negatively valanced cues, the goal of this study was to examine whether there are differences in Beta power activation between secure and insecure individuals to feedback given while performing the arrow flanker task. An interaction emerged between Attachment style (secure or insecure) and Feedback type (success or failure) has shown differences in Beta power as a function of both independent factors. These results corroborate previous findings indicating that secure and insecure individuals differently process affective stimuli. |
Georgiadis, Kostas; Kalaganis, Fotis P; Oikonomou, Vangelis P; Nikolopoulos, Spiros; Laskaris, Nikos A; Kompatsiaris, Ioannis Harneshing the Potential of EEG in Neuromarketing with Deep Learning and Riemannian Geometry Conference International Conference on Brain Informatics, Springer 2023. @conference{georgiadis2023harneshing, Neuromarketing exploits neuroimaging techniques to study consumers’ responses to various marketing aspects, with the goal of gaining a more thorough understanding of the decision-making process. The neuroimaging technology encountered the most in neuromarketing studies is Electroencephalography (EEG), mainly due to its non-invasiveness, low cost and portability. Opposed to typical neuromarketing practices, which rely on signal-power related features, we introduce an efficient decoding scheme that is based on the principles of Riemannian Geometry and realized by means of a suitable deep learning (DL) architecture (i.e., SPDNet). We take advantage of a recently released, multi-subject, neuromarketing dataset to train SPDNet under the close-to-real-life scenario of product selection from a supermarket leaflet and compare its performance against standard tools in EEG-based neuromarketing. The sample covariance is used as an estimator of the ‘quasi-instantaneous’, brain activation pattern and derived from the multichannel signal recorded while the subject is gazing at a given product. Pattern derivation is followed by proper re-alignment to reduce covariate shift (inter-subject variability) before SPDNet casts its binary decision (i.e., “Buy”-“NoBuy”). The proposed decoder is characterized by sufficient generalizability to derive valid predictions upon unseen brain signals. Overall, our experimental results provide clear evidence about the superiority of the DL-decoder relatively to both conventional neuromarketing and alternative Riemannian Geometry-based approaches, and further demonstrate how neuromarketing can benefit from recent advances in data-centric machine learning and the availability of relevant experimental datasets. |
Georgiadis, Kostas; Kalaganis, Fotis P; Riskos, Kyriakos; Matta, Eleftheria; Oikonomou, Vangelis P; Yfantidou, Ioanna; Chantziaras, Dimitris; Pantouvakis, Kyriakos; Nikolopoulos, Spiros; Laskaris, Nikos A; others, NeuMa-the absolute Neuromarketing dataset en route to an holistic understanding of consumer behaviour Journal Article In: Scientific Data, vol. 10, no. 1, pp. 508, 2023. @article{georgiadis2023neuma, Neuromarketing is a continuously evolving field that utilises neuroimaging technologies to explore consumers’ behavioural responses to specific marketing-related stimulation, and furthermore introduces novel marketing tools that could complement the traditional ones like questionnaires. In this context, the present paper introduces a multimodal Neuromarketing dataset that encompasses the data from 42 individuals who participated in an advertising brochure-browsing scenario. In more detail, participants were exposed to a series of supermarket brochures (containing various products) and instructed to select the products they intended to buy. The data collected for each individual executing this protocol included: (i) encephalographic (EEG) recordings, (ii) eye tracking (ET) recordings, (iii) questionnaire responses (demographic, profiling and product related questions), and (iv) computer mouse data. NeuMa dataset has both dynamic and multimodal nature and, due to the narrow availability of open relevant datasets, provides new and unique opportunities for researchers in the field to attempt a more holistic approach to neuromarketing. |
Riek, Nathan T; Susam, Busra T; Hudac, Caitlin M; Conner, Caitlin M; Akcakaya, Murat; Yun, Jane; White, Susan W; Mazefsky, Carla A; Gable, Philip A Feedback Related Negativity Amplitude is Greatest Following Deceptive Feedback in Autistic Adolescents Journal Article In: Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, pp. 1–11, 2023. @article{riek2023feedback, The purpose of this study is to investigate if feedback related negativity (FRN) can capture instantaneous elevated emotional reactivity in autistic adolescents. A measurement of elevated reactivity could allow clinicians to better support autistic individuals without the need for self-reporting or verbal conveyance. The study investigated reactivity in 46 autistic adolescents (ages 12–21 years) completing the Affective Posner Task which utilizes deceptive feedback to elicit distress presented as frustration. The FRN event-related potential (ERP) served as an instantaneous quantitative neural measurement of emotional reactivity. We compared deceptive and distressing feedback to both truthful but distressing feedback and truthful and non-distressing feedback using the FRN, response times in the successive trial, and Emotion Dysregulation Inventory (EDI) reactivity scores. Results revealed that FRN values were most negative to deceptive feedback as compared to truthful non-distressing feedback. Furthermore, distressing feedback led to faster response times in the successive trial on average. Lastly, participants with higher EDI reactivity scores had more negative FRN values for non-distressing truthful feedback compared to participants with lower reactivity scores. The FRN amplitude showed changes based on both frustration and reactivity. The findings of this investigation support using the FRN to better understand emotion regulation processes for autistic adolescents in future work. Furthermore, the change in FRN based on reactivity suggests the possible need to subgroup autistic adolescents based on reactivity and adjust interventions accordingly. |
Kim, Suhye; Kim, Jung-Hwan; Hyung, Wooseok; Shin, Suhkyung; Choi, Myoung Jin; Kim, Dong Hwan; Im, Chang-Hwan Characteristic Behaviors of Elementary Students in a Low Attention State During Online Learning Identified Using Electroencephalography Journal Article In: IEEE Transactions on Learning Technologies, 2023. @article{kim2023characteristic, With the widespread application of online education platforms, the necessity for identifying learner's mental states from webcam videos is increasing as it can be potentially applied to artificial intelligence-based automatic identification of learner's states. However, the behaviors that elementary school students frequently exhibit during online learning particularly when they are in a low attention state have rarely been investigated. This study employed electroencephalography (EEG) to continuously track changes in the learner's attention state during online learning. A new EEG index reflecting elementary students' attention level was developed using an EEG dataset acquired from 30 fourth graders during a computerized d2 test of attention. Characteristic behaviors of 24 elementary students in a low attention state were then identified from the webcam videos showing their upper bodies captured during 40-minute online lectures, with the proposed EEG index being used as a reference to determine their attention level at the time. Various characteristic behaviors were identified regarding participant's mouth, head, arms, and torso. For example, opening mouth or leaning back was observed more frequently in a low attention state than in a high attention state. It is expected that the characteristic behaviors reflecting learner's low attention state would be utilized as a useful reference in developing more interactive and effective online education systems. |
Cho, Ji Young; Wang, Ze-Yu; Hong, Yi-Kyung An EEG Study on the Interior Environmental Design Elements in Promoting Healing Journal Article In: Journal of the Korean Housing Association, vol. 34, no. 3, pp. 067–079, 2023. @article{cho2023eeg, This study aimed to identify the attributes of environmental design elements that promote healing. Eighteen college students participated in an EEG study, and their Ratio of Alpha to Beta (RAB) was examined in relation to eight interior design stimuli consisting of different conditions of illuminance (high/low), color (green/white), and biophilia ( natural/artificial). The EEGs of the 19 channels were measured using a dry-type EEG device (DSI-24). Participants also completed a survey questionnaire, choosing the best stimuli for healing environments and for wanting to stay. The EEG data were analyzed using a Wilcoxon signed-rank test to identify statistical differences in responses to different stimuli. The main results were as follows: (1) RAB was most frequently observed in the left temporal and parietal lobes; (2) when comparing pre- and post-stimulation, significant differences were observed between background EEG and six stimuli (S1, S3, S5, S6, S7, and S8); (3) RAB tended to be high with low illuminance, white walls, and artificial biophilia; and (4) the psychological and EEG responses did not match; stimuli with high illuminance and natural biophilia were selected the most for healing and wanting to stay environments. The results indicate the necessity for studying environmental responses via both physiological and psychological aspects as they compensate for each other. and artificial biophilia; and (4) the psychological and EEG responses did not match; stimuli with high illuminance and natural biophilia were selected the most for healing and wanting to stay environments. The results indicate the necessity for studying environmental responses via both physiological and psychological aspects as they compensate for each other. and artificial biophilia; and (4) the psychological and EEG responses did not match; stimuli with high illuminance and natural biophilia were selected the most for healing and wanting to stay environments. The results indicate the necessity for studying environmental responses via both physiological and psychological aspects as they compensate for each other. |
Fan, Tengwen; Zhang, Liming; Liu, Jianyi; Niu, Yanbin; Hong, Tian; Zhang, Wenfang; Shu, Hua; Zhao, Jingjing Phonemic mismatch negativity mediates the association between phoneme awareness and character reading ability in young Chinese children Journal Article In: Neuropsychologia, pp. 108624, 2023. @article{fan2023phonemic, Poor phonological awareness is associated with greater risk for reading disability. The underlying neural mechanism of such association may lie in the brain processing of phonological information. Lower amplitude of auditory mismatch negativity (MMN) has been associated with poor phonological awareness and with the presence of reading disability. The current study recorded auditory MMN to phoneme and lexical tone contrast with odd-ball paradigm and examined whether auditory MMN mediated the associations between phonological awareness and character reading ability through a three-year longitudinal study in 78 native Mandarin-speaking kindergarten children. Hierarchical linear regression and mediation analysis showed that the effect of phoneme awareness on the character reading ability was mediated by the phonemic MMN in young Chinese children. Findings underscore the key role of phonemic MMN for the underlying neurodevelopmental mechanism linking phoneme awareness and reading ability. |
Yu, Heeseung; Han, Eunkyoung People see what they want to see: an EEG study Journal Article In: Cognitive Neurodynamics, pp. 1–15, 2023. @article{yu2023people, This study explored selective exposure and confirmation bias in the choices participants made about which political videos to watch, and whether their political positions changed after they watched videos that either agreed with or opposed their positions on two controversial issues in South Korea: North Korea policy and social welfare policy. The participants completed questionnaires before and after they watched the videos, were asked to select thumbnails of videos before they watched any, and had their brain wave activity measured through electroencephalogram (EEG) as they watched both types of videos. The participants demonstrated selective exposure as they primarily selected video thumbnails with content that matched their political orientations, and they demonstrated confirmation bias as their questionnaire responses after they watched the videos indicated that their positions had hardened. There were also statistically significant differences in alpha, beta, sensory motor rhythm, low beta, mid beta, and fast alpha activity depending on the political orientation consistency between the participants and the videos. Future studies could expand this line of research beyond college students and beyond Asia, and longitudinal work could also be conducted to determine if the obtained patterns remain constant over time. |
Demarest, Phillip; Rustamov, Nabi; Swift, James; Xie, Tao; Adamek, Markus; Cho, Hohyun; Wilson, Elizabeth; Han, Zhuangyu; Belsten, Alexander; Luczak, Nicholas; others, A Novel Theta-Controlled Vibrotactile Brain-Computer Interface To Treat Chronic Pain: A Pilot Study Journal Article In: 2023. @article{demarest2023novel, Limitations in chronic pain therapies necessitate novel interventions that are effective, accessible, and safe. Brain-computer interfaces (BCIs) provide a promising modality for targeting neuropathology underlying chronic pain by converting recorded neural activity into perceivable outputs. Recent evidence suggests that increased frontal theta power (4–7 Hz) reflects pain relief from chronic and acute pain. Further studies have suggested that vibrotactile stimulation decreases pain intensity in experimental and clinical models. This longitudinal, non-randomized, open-label pilot study's objective was to reinforce frontal theta activity in six patients with chronic upper extremity pain using a novel vibrotactile neurofeedback BCI system. Patients increased their BCI performance, reflecting thought-driven control of neurofeedback, and showed a significant decrease in pain severity and pain interference scores without any adverse events. Pain relief significantly correlated with frontal theta modulation. These findings highlight the potential of BCI-mediated cortico-sensory coupling of frontal theta with vibrotactile stimulation for alleviating chronic pain. |
Ferrisi, Leonardo M Optimizing an assistive Brain Computer Interface that uses Auditory Attention as Input Masters Thesis 2023. @mastersthesis{ferrisi2023optimizing, Brain Computer Interfaces (BCIs) allow individuals to operate technology using (typically consciously controllable) aspects of their brain activity. Auditory BCIs utilize principles of Auditory Event Related Potentials or Auditory Evoked Potentials as a reproducible controllable features that individuals can use to operate a BCI. These Auditory BCIs in their most basic format can allow users to answer yes or no questions by listening to either one auditory stimuli or the other. Current accuracy in intended response detection for these kinds of BCIs can be as good as mean accuracy of 77 % [5]. BCI research tends to optimize the computer side of the system however the ease of use for the human operating the system is an important point of consideration as well. This research project aimed to determine what factors make a human operator able to achieve the highest accuracy using a given previously successfully demonstrated classifier. This research project primarily sought to answer the questions; to what degree people can improve their accuracy in operating an Auditory BCI and what factors of the stimulus used can be altered to achieve this. The results of this project, obtained through the data collected from six individuals, found that slower stimuli speeds for eliciting Auditory Event Related Potentials were significantly better at achieving higher prediction accuracies compared to faster stimulus speeds. The amount of time spent using the system appeared to result in diminishing returns in accuracy regardless of condition however not before an initial spike in greater classifier prediction accuracy for the second condition run on each subject. Although further research is needed to gain more conclusive evidence for or against the hypothesis, the results of this research may be able suggest that individuals can improve their performance using Auditory BCIs with practice at optimal parameters albeit within a given time frame before experiencing diminishing returns. These findings would stand to provide benefit both to continued research in making optimal non-invasive alternative communication technologies as well as making progress in finding the potential ceiling in accuracy that an Auditory BCI can have in interpreting brain activity for the intended action of the user |
Maffei, Luigi; Masullo, Massimiliano Sens i-Lab: a key facility to expand the traditional approaches in experimental acoustics Journal Article In: Institute of Noise Control Engineering, vol. 266, no. 2, pp. 134–140, 2023. @article{maffei2023sens, Recent advances in developing new tools and miniaturised devices to measure, analyse, model and simulate existing or future projects are more and more influencing the way to investigate and solve problems of various disciplines fostering deep changes in the research paradigms toward human-centred, multisensory and multidisciplinary approaches. In acoustics, beyond the negative effect of noise on individuals and its mitigation, researchers are even more interested in investigating how the complexity of the multisensory environment modulates the individuals' holistic experience. To this aim, the Department of the Università degli Studi della Campania "Luigi Vanvitelli" has built the Sens i-Lab, a key facility integrating, in a single test room, the simulation and control of the physical environment (acoustics, vision, lighting, microclimate, IAQ) with advanced systems for simulation of virtual environments. To complement the simulation and control of the stimuli, the Sens i-Lab is equipped with a set of systems and devices for motion tracking, for the measurement of the biofeedback signals (EEG, EDA, HRV, VAF) and their association with environmental stimuli and self-reported psychological measures of people well-being. Taking advantage of the Sens i-Lab setting, new research fields and applications in acoustics are possible. Some of them are presented. |
Lim, Hyunmi; Jeong, Chang Hyeon; Kang, Youn Joo; Ku, Jeonghun Attentional State-Dependent Peripheral Electrical Stimulation During Action Observation Enhances Cortical Activations in Stroke Patients Journal Article In: Cyberpsychology, Behavior, and Social Networking, 2023. @article{lim2023attentional, Brain–computer interface (BCI) is a promising technique that enables patients' interaction with computers or machines by analyzing specific brain signal patterns and provides patients with brain state-dependent feedback to assist in their rehabilitation. Action observation (AO) and peripheral electrical stimulation (PES) are conventional methods used to enhance rehabilitation outcomes by promoting neural plasticity. In this study, we assessed the effects of attentional state-dependent feedback in the combined application of BCI-AO with PES on sensorimotor cortical activation in patients after stroke. Our approach involved showing the participants a video with repetitive grasping actions under four different tasks. A mu band suppression (8–13 Hz) corresponding to each task was computed. A topographical representation showed that mu suppression of the dominant (healthy) and affected hemispheres (stroke) gradually became prominent during the tasks. There were significant differences in mu suppression in the affected motor and frontal cortices of the stroke patients. The involvement of both frontal and motor cortices became prominent in the BCI-AO+triggered PES task, in which feedback was given to the patients according to their attentive watching. Our findings suggest that synchronous stimulation according to patient attention is important for neurorehabilitation of stroke patients, which can be achieved with the combination of BCI-AO feedback with PES. BCI-AO feedback combined with PES could be effective in facilitating sensorimotor cortical activation in the affected hemispheres of stroke patients. |
Seo, Seoung Won; Kim, Yong Seong Stroke Patients: Effects of Combining Sitting Table Tennis Exercise with Neurological Physical Therapy on Brain Waves Journal Article In: The Journal of Korean Physical Therapy, vol. 35, no. 1, pp. 19–23, 2023. @article{seo2023stroke, Purpose: The purpose of this study is to analyze the brain waves and develop various exercise programs to improve the physical and mental aspects of stroke patients when neurological physical therapy and sitting table tennis exercise are applied to stroke patients. Methods: In this study, an experiment was conducted on 15 patients diagnosed with stroke, and training was performed after changing the ping-pong table to a sitting position to apply ping-pong exercise to stroke patients. After training was conducted for 40 minutes twice a week for 4 weeks, brain waves were measured before and after. EEG was measured using Laxtha’s DSI-24 equipment as a measurement tool, and data values were extracted through the Telescan program. Results: Most of the relative beta waves showed a significant difference before and after the intervention. As for the characteristics of beta waves, this result can be seen as being highly activated during exercise or other activities. Conclusion: Ping-pong exercise in a sitting position is a good intervention method for stroke patients, and it can help to use it as basic data in clinical practice by showing brain activity. |
Chen, Sheng; Xie, Haiqun; Yang, Hongjun; Fan, Chenchen; Hou, Zengguang; Zhang, Chutian A Classification Framework Based on Multi-modal Features for Detection of Cognitive Impairments Journal Article In: Intelligent Robotics: Third China Annual Conference, CCF CIRAC 2022, pp. 349–361, 2023. @article{chen2023classification, Mild cognitive impairment (MCI) is the preliminary stage of dementia, and has a high risk of progression to Alzheimer’s disease (AD) in the elderly. Early detection of MCI plays a vital role in preventing progression of AD. Clinical diagnosis of MCI requires many examinations, which are highly demanding on hospital equipment and expensive for patients. Electroencephalography (EEG) offers a non-invasive and less expensive way to diagnose MCI early. In this paper, we propose a multi-modal fusion classification framework for MCI detection. We collect EEG data using a delayed match-to-sample task and analyze the differences between the two groups. Based on analysis results, we extract Power spectral density (PSD), PSD enhanced, Event-related potential (ERP) features in EEG signal along with physiological features and behavioral features of the subjects to classify MCI and healthy elderly. By comparing the effect of different features on classification performance, we find that the time-domain based ERP features are better than the frequency-domain based PSD or PSD enhanced features to overcome inter-individual differences to distinguish MCI, and these two features have good complementarity, fusing ERP and PSD enhanced features can greatly improve the classification accuracy to 84.74%. The final result shows that MCI and healthy elderly can be well classified by using this framework. |
Kambhamettu, Sudhendra; Cruz, Meenalosini Vimal; Anitha, S; Chakkaravarthy, S Sibi; Kumar, K Nandeesh Brain-Computer Interface-Assisted Automated Wheelchair Control Management--Cerebro: A BCI Application Journal Article In: Brain-Computer Interface: Using Deep Learning Applications, pp. 205–229, 2023. @article{kambhamettu2023brain, Technology today serves millions of people suffering from mobility impairments across the globe in numerous ways. Although advancements in medicine and healthcare systems improve the life expectancy of the general population, sophisticated engineering techniques and computing processes have long facilitated the patient in the recovery process. People struggling with mobility impairments and especially spine injuries which also leads to loss of speech, often have a narrow group of devices to aid them move from place-to-place and they are often limited to just movement functionality. BCI (Brain Computer Interface) powered wheelchairs leverage the power of the brain, i.e. translating the thoughts/neural activity into real-world movement providing automated motion without any third party intervention. Many BCI powered wheelchairs in the market are cumbersome to operate and provide only singular functionality of movement. To address this problem and improve the state of BCI products, Cerebro introduces the first ever go-to market product utilizing Artificial Intelligence to facilitate mobility features with built-in speech functionality via blink detection. Further sections of the Chapter take an in-depth look into each layer of the Cerebro system. |
2022 |
Dhaliwal, BS; Haddad, J; Debrincat, M; others, In: Correspondence: Peter Hurwitz, Clarity Science LLC, vol. 750, 2022. @article{dhaliwal2022changes, Background: Globally, pain and pain-related diseases are the leading causes of disability and disease burden. In the United States, pain is the most common reason patients consult primary care providers. An estimated 100 million people live with chronic or recurrent pain. Existing pharmacological treatments for pain include anti-inflammatory agents, opioids, and other oral and topical analgesics. Many of these have been associated with troublesome and potentially harmful adverse effects. Understanding the complex pain neuromatrix may help in identifying alternative, non-invasive strategies and treatment approaches to address pain severity, interference, and improve patient outcomes. The neuromatrix of pain is a network of neuronal pathways and circuits responding to sensory (nociceptive) stimulation. Research has suggested that the output patterns of the body-self neuromatrix are responsible for causing or triggering perceptual, homeostatic, and behavioral programs following traumatic injury, other pathology, or chronic stress. As such, pain can be considered a product of the output of a widely distributed neural network within the brain instead of a sequential result of sensory inputs triggered by injury, inflammation, or other pathology. For over a century, the Brodmann Areas remain the most widely known and frequently cited cytoarchitectural organization of the human cortex. Certain Brodmann areas of the brain have been associated with the current understanding of the neuromatrix of pain. The areas expands well beyond the thalamus and anterior cingulate, and primary (S1) and secondary (S2) somatosensory cortices to include the midbrain region of the periaqueductal gray (PAG) and the lenticular complex as well as the insula, orbitofrontal (Brodmann's area [BA] 11, 47), prefrontal (BA 9, 10, 44-46), motor (BA 6, Supplementary motor area, and M1), inferior parietal (BA 39, 40), and anterior cingulate (BA 24, 25) cortices (ACCs). Treatments that are non-invasive and non-pharmacological and target both central and peripheral nociceptive mechanisms that are identified as having an impact on the Brodmann areas associated with the neuromatrix of pain may potentially be considered a beneficial pain management option for patients. Haptic vibrotactile trigger technology targets the nociceptive pathways and is theorized to disrupt the neuromatrix of pain. The technology has been incorporated into non-pharmacological patches and other non-invasive routes of delivery such as apparel (socks), braces, wristbands, and compression sleeves. The purpose of this minimal risk study was to compare electroencephalogram (EEG) patterns in areas of the brain that have been associated with the neuromatrix for pain in subjects wearing socks that were embedded with haptic vibrotactile trigger technology with those patients that wore socks that were not embedded with the technology. Methods: This IRB-approved study compared electroencephalogram (EEG) patterns in subjects wearing cloth socks embedded with haptic vibrotactile trigger technology (Superneuro VTT Enhanced Socks (Srysty Holding Co., Toronto, Canada) with those patients that wore cloth socks that were not embedded with the technology. Baseline EEG data from 19 scalp locations were recorded in sixty (60) adult subjects (36 females and 24 males) ranging from ages 14 to 83 wearing standard store-purchased cloth socks on their feet. The subject’s standard socks were then removed and replaced with the Superneuro VTT enhanced socks on the subject’s feet. A second EEG recording was then obtained. Both eyes-closed and eyes-open data were recorded. Results: The results showed statistically significant t-test differences (P < .01) in 59 out of 60 subjects in absolute power and 60 out of 60 subjects showed statistically significant differences in coherence and phase difference. The largest differences were in the alpha1 and beta2 frequency bands and especially in central scalp locations. Paired t-tests of LORETA current source densities between socks on and socks off demonstrated statistically significant differences in 60 out of 60 subjects. The largest effects of Superneuro VTT enhanced socks on were on the medial bank of the somatosensory cortex as well as in the left frontal lobes in the theta and alpha frequency. Conclusions: Study results indicate that foot stimulation with embedded haptic vibrotactile trigger technology showed significant modulation in the Brodmann areas that have been shown to be associated with the neuromatrix for pain in the human brain. Further research is suggested to evaluate if this technology has a positive impact on pain severity, pain interference, and quality of life and to be considered as a potentially beneficial pain management strategy and as part of a multi-modal treatment approach. |
Ocay, Don Daniel; Teel, Elizabeth F; Luo, Owen D; Savignac, Chloé; Mahdid, Yacine; Blain-Moraes, Stefanie; Ferland, Catherine E Electroencephalographic characteristics of children and adolescents with chronic musculoskeletal pain Journal Article In: PAIN Reports, vol. 7, no. 6, pp. e1054, 2022. @article{ocay2022electroencephalographic, Introduction: The pathophysiology of pediatric musculoskeletal (MSK) pain is unclear, contributing to persistent challenges to its management. Objectives: This study hypothesizes that children and adolescents with chronic MSK pain (CPs) will show differences in electroencephalography (EEG) features at rest and during thermal pain modalities when compared with age-matched controls. Methods: One hundred forty-two CP patients and 45 age-matched healthy controls (HCs) underwent a standardized thermal tonic heat and cold stimulations, while a 21-electrode headset collected EEG data. Cohorts were compared with respect to their EEG features of spectral power, peak frequency, permutation entropy, weight phase-lag index, directed phase-lag index, and node degree at 4 frequency bands, namely, delta (1–4 Hz), theta (4–8 Hz), alpha (8–13 Hz), and beta (13–30 Hz), at rest and during the thermal conditions. Results: At rest, CPs showed increased global delta (P = 0.0493) and beta (P = 0.0002) power in comparison with HCs. These findings provide further impetus for the investigation and prevention of long-lasting developmental sequalae of early life chronic pain processes. Although no cohort differences in pain intensity scores were found during the thermal pain modalities, CPs and HCs showed significant difference in changes in EEG spectral power, peak frequency, permutation entropy, and network functional connectivity at specific frequency bands (P < 0.05) during the tonic heat and cold stimulations. Conclusion: This suggests that EEG can characterize subtle differences in heat and cold pain sensitivity in CPs. The complementation of EEG and evoked pain in the clinical assessment of pediatric chronic MSK pain can better detect underlying pain mechanisms and changes in pain sensitivity. |
Chang, Won Kee; Lim, Hyunmi; Park, Seo Hyun; Lim, Chaiyoung; Paik, Nam-Jong; Kim, Won-Seok; Ku, Jeonghun Effect of Immersive Virtual Mirror Visual Feedback on Mu Suppression and Coherence in Motor and Parietal Cortex in Stroke Journal Article In: 2022. @article{chang2022effect, Background: This study aimed to investigate the activation pattern of the motor cortex (M1) and parietal cortex during immersive virtual reality (VR)-based mirror visual feedback (MVF) of the upper limb in patients with chronic stroke. Methods: Fourteen patients with chronic stroke with severe upper limb hemiparesis (Brunnstrom stage of hand 1-3) and 21 healthy controls were included. The participants performed wrist extension tasks with their unaffected wrists (or the dominant side in controls). In the MVF condition, the movement of the affected hand was synchronized with that of the unaffected hand. In contrast, only the movement of the unaffected hand was shown in the no-MVF condition. Electroencephalography was obtained during experiments with two conditions (MVF vs no-MVF). Mu suppression in the bilateral M1 and parietal cortex and mu coherence between the ipsilateral M1 and parietal cortex in each hemisphere and interhemispheric M1 were used for analyses. Results: In patients with stroke, MVF induced significant mu suppression in both the ipsilesional M1 and parietal lobes (p=0.006 and p=0.009, respectively), while significant mu suppression was observed in the bilateral M1 (p=0.003 for ipsilesional and p=0.041 for contralesional M1, respectively) and contralesional (contralateral hemisphere to the moving hand) parietal lobes in the healthy controls (p=0.036). The ipsilesional mu coherence between the M1 and parietal cortex in patients with stroke was stronger than that in controls regardless of MVF condition (p<0.001), while mu coherence between interhemispheric M1 cortices was significantly weaker in patients with stroke (p=0.032). Conclusion: In patients with stroke, MVF using immersive VR induces mu suppression in the ipsilesional M1 and parietal lobe. Our findings provide evidence of the neural mechanism of MVF using immersive VR and support its application in patients with stroke with severe hemiparesis. |
Rustamov, Nabi; Wilson, Elizabeth A; Fogarty, Alexandra E; Crock, Lara W; Leuthardt, Eric C; Haroutounian, Simon Relief of chronic pain associated with increase in midline frontal theta power Journal Article In: Pain Reports, vol. 7, no. 6, 2022. @article{rustamov2022relief, Introduction: There is a need to identify objective cortical electrophysiological correlates for pain relief that could potentially contribute to a better pain management. However, the field of developing brain biomarkers for pain relief is still largely underexplored. Objectives: The objective of this study was to investigate cortical electrophysiological correlates associated with relief from chronic pain. Those features of pain relief could serve as potential targets for novel therapeutic interventions to treat pain. Methods: In 12 patients with chronic pain in the upper or lower extremity undergoing a clinically indicated nerve block procedure, brain activity was recorded by means of electroencephalogram before and 30 minutes after the nerve block procedure. To determine the specific cortical electrophysiological correlates of relief from chronic pain, 12 healthy participants undergoing cold-pressor test to induce experimental acute pain were used as a control group. The data were analyzed to characterize power spectral density patterns of pain relief and identify their source generators at cortical level. Results: Chronic pain relief was associated with significant delta, theta, and alpha power increase at the frontal area. However, only midfrontal theta power increase showed significant positive correlation with magnitude of reduction in pain intensity. The sources of theta power rebound were located in the left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) and midline frontal cortex. Furthermore, theta power increase in the midline frontal cortex was significantly higher with chronic vs acute pain relief. Conclusion: These findings may provide basis for targeting chronic pain relief via modulation of the midline frontal theta oscillations. |
Woo, Hee-Soon; Song, Chiang-Soon Effects of Low Visual Acuity Simulations on Eye-Hand Coordination and Brainwaves in Healthy Adults Journal Article In: Physical Therapy Rehabilitation Science, vol. 11, no. 3, pp. 296–303, 2022. @article{woo2022effects, Objective: In general, macular degeneration, cataracts and glaucoma generally cause visual injury in clinical settings. This study aimed to examine the effects of low visual acuity simulations on hand manual dexterity function and brainwaves in healthy young adults. Design: Cross-sectional study design Methods: This study was an observational, cross-sectional study. Seventy healthy young adults participated in this study. To evaluate the effects of low visual acuity simulations on hand function and brain waves, this study involved four different visual conditions including (1) normal vision, (2) simulated cataracts, (3) simulated glaucoma, and (4) simulated macular degeneration. The hand function was measured to use the Minnesota manual dexterity test (MMDT), and the brainwaves was also measured to use the electroencephalography. Results: In hand function, placing and turning performance on the MMDT in the normal visual condition was significantly different than that in the cataract and macular degeneration conditions (p<0.05), and the placing performance was significantly differred in the normal condition than that in the simulated glaucoma. However, turning was not significantly different in the normal condition than that in the simulated glaucoma. The alpha, beta, and gamma waves did not significantly differ among the four visual conditions (p>0.05). Conclusions: The results suggest that limited visual information negatively affects the ability to perform tasks requiring arm-hand dexterity and eye-hand coordination. However, the effectiveness of low visual acuity on the brainwaves should be further studied for rehabilitative evidence of visual impairment. |
Miltiadous, Andreas; Aspiotis, Vasileios; Sakkas, Konstantinos; Giannakeas, Nikolaos; Glavas, Euripidis; Tzallas, Alexandros T An experimental protocol for exploration of stress in an immersive VR scenario with EEG Conference 2022 7th South-East Europe Design Automation, Computer Engineering, Computer Networks and Social Media Conference (SEEDA-CECNSM), IEEE 2022. @conference{miltiadous2022experimental, Stress is a subject always relevant to scientific research due to the numerous implications in human life. Typical biomarkers used in the physiological evaluation of stress include Electrocardiography, cortisol levels, galvanic skin response and other. Recently, one less widely used instrument for the assessment of stress that has been re-emerged due to advancements in computational power and machine learning techniques, is Electroencephalography. Moreover, as Virtual Reality HMDs are being rapidly adopted by the research community it becomes apparent that leveraging the offered advantages of VR for the exploration of stress can lead to novel controlable and reproducable experimental procedures. In this paper we combine EEG, ECG and the Perceived Stress Scale with a Virtual Reality phobia induction setting, to propose a protocol for assessing stress. The suggested protocol can be used for functional brain connectivity investigation and thus the evaluation of stress while it and can be expanded via the incorporation of machine learning algorithms for automatic stress level classification. |
Rominger, Christian; Gubler, Dani`ele A; Makowski, Lisa M; Troche, Stefan J In: International journal of psychophysiology, 2022. @article{rominger2022more, The neurophysiological investigation of creative idea generation is a growing research area. EEG studies congruently reported the sensitivity of upper alpha power (10-12 Hz) for the creative ideation process and its outcome. However, the majority of studies were between-subject design studies and research directly comparing the neurophysiological activation pattern when generating more and less creative ideas within a person are rare. Therefore, the present study was specifically focused on investigating brain activation patterns associated with the generation of more vs. less creative ideas. We applied an alternate uses task (AU-task; i.e., finding original uses for everyday objects such as a brick) in a sample of 74 participants and recorded the brain activation during the AU-task and reference period. A portable EEG system with 21 dry electrodes arranged in the international 10–20 system and linked ear as reference was used. We found a higher increase of upper alpha power during creative ideation (relative to reference period, i.e., task-related power, TRP) over right posterior sites when people generated more compared to less creative ideas. This was accompanied by an increase of functional coupling (i.e., task-related coherence increase) between frontal and parietal/occipital sites, which suggests higher internal attention and more control over sensory processes. Taken together, these findings complement the existing creativity research literature and indicate the importance of alpha power for the creative ideation process also within people. |
Hu, Yuxia; Wang, Yufei; Zhang, Rui; Hu, Yubo; Fang, Mingzhu; Li, Zhe; Shi, Li; Zhang, Yankun; Zhang, Zhong; Gao, Jinfeng; others, Assessing stroke rehabilitation degree based on quantitative EEG index and nonlinear parameters Journal Article In: Cognitive Neurodynamics, pp. 1–9, 2022. @article{hu2022assessing, The assessment of motor function is critical to the rehabilitation of stroke patients. However, commonly used evaluation methods are based on behavior scoring, which lacks neurological indicators that directly reflect the motor function of the brain. The objective of this study was to investigate whether resting-state EEG indicators could improve stroke rehabilitation evaluation. We recruited 68 participants and recorded their resting-state EEG data. According to Brunnstrom stage, the participants were divided into three groups: severe, moderate, and mild. Ten quantitative electroencephalographic (QEEG) and five non-linear parameters of resting-state EEG were calculated for further analysis. Statistical tests were performed, and the genetic algorithm-support vector machine was used to select the best feature combination for classification. We found the QEEG parameters show significant differences in Delta, Alpha1, Alpha2, DAR, and DTABR (P < 0.05) among the three groups. Regarding nonlinear parameters, ApEn, SampEn, Lz, and C0 showed significant differences (P < 0.05). The optimal feature classification combination accuracy rate reached 85.3%. Our research shows that resting-state EEG indicators could be used for stroke rehabilitation evaluation. |
Won, Kyungho; Kim, Heegyu; Gwon, Daeun; Ahn, Minkyu; Nam, Chang S; Jun, Sung Chan Can Vibrotactile Stimulation and tDCS Help Inefficient BCI Users? Journal Article In: 2022. @article{won2022can, Brain-computer interface (BCI) has helped people by enabling them to control a computer or machine through brain activity without actual body movement. Despite this advantage, BCI cannot be used widely because some people cannot achieve controllable performance. To solve this problem, researchers have proposed stimulation methods to modulate relevant brain activity to improve BCI performance. However, multiple studies have reported mixed results following stimulation, and comparative study of different stimulation modalities has been overlooked. Accordingly, this comparative study was designed to investigate vibrotactile stimulation and transcranial direct current stimulation’s (tDCS) effects on brain activity modulation and motor imagery BCI performance among inefficient BCI users. We recruited 44 subjects and divided them into sham, vibrotactile stimulation, and tDCS groups, and low performers were selected from each stimulation group. We found that the BCI performance of low performers in the vibrotactile stimulation group increased significantly by 9.13% (p=0.0053), and while the tDCS group subjects’ performance increased by 5.13%, it was not significant. In contrast, sham group subjects showed no increased performance. In addition to BCI performance, pre-stimulus alpha band power and the phase locking value (PLVs) averaged over sensory motor areas showed significant increases in low performers following stimulation in the vibrotactile stimulation and tDCS groups, while sham stimulation group subjects and high performers across all groups showed no significant stimulation effects. Our findings suggest that stimulation effects may differ depending upon BCI efficiency, and inefficient BCI users have greater plasticity than efficient BCI users. |
Michaelides, Andreas; Mitchell, Ellen Siobhan; Behr, Heather; Ho, Annabell Suh; Hanada, Grant; Lee, Jihye; McPartland, Sue Executive function-related improvements on a commercial CBT-based weight management intervention: Pilot randomized controlled trial Journal Article In: International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, vol. 19, 2022. @article{michaelides2022executive, Executive functioning is a key component involved in many of the processes necessary for effective weight management behavior change (e.g., setting goals). Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) and third-wave CBT (e.g., mindfulness) are considered first-line treatments for obesity, but it is unknown to what extent they can improve or sustain executive functioning in a generalized weight management intervention. This pilot randomized controlled trial examined if a CBT-based generalized weight management intervention would affect executive functioning and executive function-related brain activity in individuals with obesity or overweight. Participants were randomized to an intervention condition (N = 24) that received the Noom Weight program or to a control group (N = 26) receiving weekly educational newsletters. EEG measurements were taken during Flanker, Stroop, and N-back tasks at baseline and months 1 through 4. After 4 months, the intervention condition evidenced greater accuracy over time on the Flanker and Stroop tasks and, to a lesser extent, neural markers of executive function compared to the control group. The intervention condition also lost more weight than controls (−7.1 pounds vs. +1.0 pounds). Given mixed evidence on whether weight management interventions, particularly CBT-based weight management interventions, are associated with changes in markers of executive function, this pilot study contributes preliminary evidence that a multicomponent CBT-based weight management intervention (i.e., that which provides both support for weight management and is based on CBT) can help individuals sustain executive function over 4 months compared to controls |
Han, Chuanliang; Zhao, Xixi; Li, Meijia; Haihambo, Naem; Teng, Jiayi; Li, Sixiao; Qiu, Jinyi; Feng, Xiaoyang; Gao, Michel Enhancement of the neural response during 40 Hz auditory entrainment in closed-eye state in human prefrontal region Journal Article In: Cognitive Neurodynamics, pp. 1–12, 2022. @article{han2022enhancement, Gamma-band activity was thought to be related to several high-level cognitive functions, and Gamma ENtrainment Using Sensory stimulation (GENUS, 40 Hz sensory combined visual and auditory stimulation) was found to have positive effects on patients with Alzheimer’s dementia. Other studies found, however, that neural responses induced by single 40 Hz auditory stimulation were relatively weak. To address this, we included several new experimental conditions (sounds with sinusoidal or square wave; open-eye and closed-eye state) combined with auditory stimulation with the aim of investigating which of these induces a stronger 40 Hz neural response. We found that when participant´s eyes were closed, sounds with 40 Hz sinusoidal wave induced the strongest 40 Hz neural response in the prefrontal region compared to responses in other conditions. More interestingly, we also found there is a suppression of alpha rhythms with 40 Hz square wave sounds. Our results provide potential new methods when using auditory entrainment, which may result in a better effect in preventing cerebral atrophy and improving cognitive performance. |
Zeifman, Richard J; Spriggs, Meg J; Kettner, Hannes; Lyons, Taylor; Rosas, Fernando; Mediano, Pedro AM; Erritzoe, David; Carhart-Harris, Robin In: 2022. @article{zeifman2022relaxed, Background:The Relaxed Beliefs Under pSychedelics (REBUS) modelproposes that serotonergic psychedelics decrease the precision weighting of neurobiologically-encoded beliefs, and offers a unified account of the acute and therapeutic action of psychedelics. AlthoughREBUShas received some neuroscientific support, little research has examined its psychological validity. We conducted a preliminary examination of two psychological assumptions of REBUS: (a) psychedelics foster acute relaxation and post-acute revision of confidence in mental-health-relevant beliefs; (b) this relaxation and revision facilitatespositive therapeutic outcomesand is associated with the entropy of EEG signals(anindex of neurophysiological mechanisms relevant to REBUS). Method:Healthy individuals (N=11) were administered 1 mg and 25 mgpsilocybin4-weeks apart. Confidence ratings forpersonally held negative and positive beliefswere obtainedbefore, during, and 4-weeks after dosing sessions. Acute entropyand self-reported subjective experiences were measured, as was well-being (before and 4-weeks after dosing sessions). Results:Confidence in negative self-beliefsdecreased following 25 mgpsilocybin and not following 1 mgpsilocybin. Entropy and subjective effects under 25 mgpsilocybincorrelated with decreases in negative self-belief confidence(acute and4-weeks after dosing). Particularlystrong evidence was seen for a relationship between decreases in negative self-belief confidence and increases in well-beingat 4-weeks.Conclusions:We reportthe first empirical evidence that therelaxation and revision of negative self-belief confidencemediatespositive psychological outcomes; a psychological assumption ofREBUS. Replication within larger and clinical samples remains necessary. We also introduce a newmeasure, the Relaxed BEliefs Questionnaire (REB-Q),forexaminingthe robustness of these preliminary findingsand the utility of the REBUSmode |
Li, Jian; Maffei, Luigi; Pascale, Aniello; Masullo, Massimiliano Effects of spatialized water-sound sequences for traffic noise masking on brain activities Journal Article In: The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, vol. 152, no. 1, pp. 172–183, 2022. @article{li2022effects, Informational masking of water sounds has been proven effective in mitigating traffic noise perception with different sound levels and signal-to-noise ratios, but less is known about the effects of the spatial distribution of water sounds on the perception of the surrounding environment and corresponding psychophysical responses. Three different spatial settings of water-sound sequences with a traffic noise condition were used to investigate the role of spatialization of water-sound sequences on traffic noise perception. The neural responses of 20 participants were recorded by a portable electroencephalogram (EEG) device during the spatial sound playback time. The mental effects and attention process related to informational masking were assessed by the analysis of the EEG spectral power distribution and sensor-level functional connectivity along with subjective assessments. The results showed higher relative power of the alpha band and greater alpha-beta ratio among water-sound sequence conditions compared to traffic noise conditions, which confirmed the increased relaxation on the mental state induced by the introduction of water sounds. Moreover, different spatial settings of water-sound sequences evoked different cognitive network responses. The setting of two-position switching water brought more attentional network activations than other water sequences related to the information masking process along with more positive subjective feelings |
Kim, Min Gyu; Lim, Hyunmi; Lee, Hye Sun; Han, In Jun; Ku, Jeonghun; Kang, Youn Joo In: Journal of Neural Engineering, vol. 19, no. 3, 2022. @article{kim2022brain, Objective. Action observation (AO) combined with brain–computer interface (BCI) technology enhances cortical activation. Peripheral electrical stimulation (PES) increases corticospinal excitability, thereby activating brain plasticity. To maximize motor recovery, we assessed the effects of BCI-AO combined with PES on corticospinal plasticity. Approach. Seventeen patients with chronic hemiplegic stroke and 17 healthy subjects were recruited. The participants watched a video of repetitive grasping actions with four different tasks for 15 min: (A) AO alone; (B) AO + PES; (C) BCI-AO + continuous PES; and (D) BCI-AO + triggered PES. PES was applied at the ulnar nerve of the wrist. The tasks were performed in a random order at least three days apart. We assessed the latency and amplitude of motor evoked potentials (MEPs). We examined changes in MEP parameters pre-and post-exercise across the four tasks in the first dorsal interosseous muscle of the dominant hand (healthy subjects) and affected hand (stroke patients). Main results. The decrease in MEP latency and increase in MEP amplitude after the four tasks were significant in both groups. The increase in MEP amplitude was sustained for 20 min after tasks B, C, and D in both groups. The increase in MEP amplitude was significant between tasks A vs. B, B vs. C, and C vs. D. The estimated mean difference in MEP amplitude post-exercise was the highest for A and D in both groups. Significance. The results indicate that BCI-AO combined with PES is superior to AO alone or AO + PES for facilitating corticospinal plasticity in both healthy subjects and patients with stroke. Furthermore, this study supports the idea that synchronized activation of cortical and peripheral networks can enhance neuroplasticity after stroke. We suggest that the BCI-AO paradigm and PES could provide a novel neurorehabilitation strategy for patients with stroke. |
Kim, Nayeon; Gero, John S Neurophysiological Responses to Biophilic Design: A Pilot Experiment Using VR and EEG Unpublished 2022. @unpublished{kimneurophysiological, This pilot study explores the effects of biophilic design on university students’ neurophysiological responses in virtual classrooms through measuring relative alpha and beta power using EEG in two different display conditions: a conventional computer display and an immersive VR HeadMounted Display. Seventeen male undergraduate students from both a design major and a non-design major in their twenties at Yonsei University participated. Seven different biophilic design cases were presented as visual stimuli to participants in the two different conditions. Results of ANOVA analysis revealed significant main effects of condition and hemisphere in the relative alpha power. Results revealed there is significant interaction effect between case and major as well as between condition, case, hemisphere, and major in relative beta power. Results showed statistically significant differences in some electrodes of both relative alpha and relative beta measurements between some cases when presented in the computer display. In the VR presentation, differences were found only in the relative beta in some electrodes. This study has the potential to contribute to building evidencebased design strategies for improving biophilic design environments. |
Schneefeld, F; Doelling, K; Marchesotti, S; Schwartz, S; Igloi, K; Giraud, AL; Arnal, LH Salient 40 Hz sounds probe affective aversion and neural excitability Journal Article In: bioRxiv, 2022. @article{schneefeld2022salient, The human auditory system is not equally reactive to all frequencies of the audible spectrum. Emotional and behavioral reactions to loud or aversive acoustic features can vary from one individual to another, to the point that some exhibit exaggerated or even pathological responses to certain sounds. The neural mechanisms underlying these interindividual differences remain unclear. Whether distinct aversion profiles map onto neural excitability at the individual level needs to be tested. Here, we measured behavioral and EEG responses to click trains (from 10 to 250 Hz, spanning the roughness and pitch perceptual ranges) to test the hypothesis that interindividual variability in aversion to rough sounds is reflected in neural response differences between participants. Linking subjective aversion to 40 Hz steady-state EEG responses, we demonstrate that participants experiencing enhanced aversion to roughness also show stronger neural responses to this attribute. Interestingly, this pattern also correlates with inter-individual anxiety levels, suggesting that this personality trait might interact with subjective sensitivity and neural excitability to these sounds. These results support the idea that 40 Hz sounds can probe the excitability of non-canonical auditory systems involved in exogenous salience processing and aversive responses at the individual level. By linking subjective aversion to neural excitability, 40 Hz sounds provide neuromarkers relevant to a variety of pathological conditions, such as those featuring enhanced emotional sensitivity (hyperacusis, anxiety) or aberrant neural responses at 40 Hz (autism, schizophrenia). |
Haro, Stephanie; Rao, Hrishikesh M; Quatieri, Thomas F; Smalt, Christopher J EEG alpha and pupil diameter reflect endogenous auditory attention switching and listening effort Journal Article In: European Journal of Neuroscience, vol. 55, no. 5, pp. 1262–1277, 2022. @article{haro2022eeg, Everyday environments often contain distracting competing talkers and background noise, requiring listeners to focus their attention on one acoustic source and reject others. During this auditory attention task, listeners may naturally interrupt their sustained attention and switch attended sources. The effort required to perform this attention switch has not been well studied in the context of competing continuous speech. In this work, we developed two variants of endogenous attention switching and a sustained attention control. We characterized these three experimental conditions under the context of decoding auditory attention, while simultaneously evaluating listening effort and neural markers of spatial-audio cues. A least-squares, electroencephalography (EEG)-based, attention decoding algorithm was implemented across all conditions. It achieved an accuracy of 69.4% and 64.0% when computed over nonoverlapping 10 and 5-s correlation windows, respectively. Both decoders illustrated smooth transitions in the attended talker prediction through switches at approximately half of the analysis window size (e.g., the mean lag taken across the two switch conditions was 2.2 s when the 5-s correlation window was used). Expended listening effort, as measured by simultaneous EEG and pupillometry, was also a strong indicator of whether the listeners sustained attention or performed an endogenous attention switch (peak pupil diameter measure [ ] and minimum parietal alpha power measure [ ]). We additionally found evidence of talker spatial cues in the form of centrotemporal alpha power lateralization ( ). These results suggest that listener effort and spatial cues may be promising features to pursue in a decoding context, in addition to speech-based features. |
Gubler, Dani`ele A; Zeiss, Stephan; Egloff, Niklaus; Frickmann, Frank; Goetze, Benjamin; Harnik, Michael; Streitberger, Konrad; Troche, Stefan J; others, The effect of chronic pain on voluntary and involuntary capture of attention: An event-related potential study. Journal Article In: Behavioral neuroscience, vol. 136, no. 2, pp. 195, 2022. @article{gubler2022effect, Although the interrupting effect of chronic pain on voluntary-directed attention is well-documented, research on the impact of chronic pain on involuntary-directed attention remains incomplete. This study aimed to investigate the influence of chronic pain on involuntary as well as voluntary allocation of attention as, respectively, indexed by the P3a and P3b components in the event-related potential derived from the electroencephalogram. Both involuntary and voluntary captures of attention were compared between 33 patients with chronic pain and 33 healthy controls using an auditory three-stimulus oddball task (with standard, target, and unexpected distractor tones). The results revealed a reduced P3a amplitude as well as a reduced P3b amplitude in patients with chronic pain compared to healthy controls, indicating a detrimental effect of chronic pain on involuntary and voluntary attention, respectively. This study extends the picture of the impairing effects of chronic pain on attentional allocation to a current task and attentional allocation to information outside the focus of attention. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved) |
2021 |
Arakaki, Xianghong; Hung, Shao-Min; Rochart, Roger; Fonteh, Alfred N; Harrington, Michael G Alpha desynchronization during Stroop test unmasks cognitively healthy individuals with abnormal CSF Amyloid/Tau Journal Article In: Neurobiology of Aging, 2021. @article{arakaki2021alpha, Synaptic dysfunctions precede cognitive decline in Alzheimer's disease (AD) by decades, affect executive functions, and can be detected by quantitative electroencephalography (qEEG). We used qEEG combined with Stroop testing to identify changes of inhibitory controls in cognitively healthy individuals with an abnormal versus normal ratio of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) amyloid/total-tau. We studied two groups of participants (60-94 years) with either normal (CH-NAT or controls, n = 20) or abnormal (CH-PAT, n = 21) CSF amyloid/tau ratio. We compared: alpha event-related desynchronization (ERD), alpha spectral entropy (SE), and their relationships with estimated cognitive reserve. CH-PATs had more negative occipital alpha ERD, and higher frontal and occipital alpha SE during low load congruent trials, indicating hyperactivity. CH-PATs demonstrated fewer frontal SE changes with higher load, incongruent Stroop testing. Correlations of alpha ERD with estimated cognitive reserve were significant in CH-PATs but not in CH-NATs. These results suggested compensatory hyperactivity in CH-PATs compared to CH-NATs. We did not find differences in alpha ERD comparisons with individual CSF amyloid(A), p-tau(T), total-tau(N) biomarkers. |
Dong, Sunghee; Jin, Yan; Bak, SuJin; Yoon, Bumchul; Jeong, Jichai Explainable Convolutional Neural Network to Investigate Age-Related Changes in Multi-Order Functional Connectivity Journal Article In: Electronics, vol. 10, no. 23, pp. 3020, 2021. @article{dong2021explainable, Functional connectivity (FC) is a potential candidate that can increase the performance of brain-computer interfaces (BCIs) in the elderly because of its compensatory role in neural circuits. However, it is difficult to decode FC by the current machine learning techniques because of a lack of physiological understanding. To investigate the suitability of FC in BCIs for the elderly, we propose the decoding of lower- and higher-order FC using a convolutional neural network (CNN) in six cognitive-motor tasks. The layer-wise relevance propagation (LRP) method describes how age-related changes in FCs impact BCI applications for the elderly compared to younger adults. A total of 17 young adults (24.5±2.7 years) and 12 older (72.5±3.2 years) adults were recruited to perform tasks related to hand-force control with or without mental calculation. The CNN yielded a six-class classification accuracy of 75.3% in the elderly, exceeding the 70.7% accuracy for the younger adults. In the elderly, the proposed method increased the classification accuracy by 88.3% compared to the filter-bank common spatial pattern. The LRP results revealed that both lower- and higher-order FCs were dominantly overactivated in the prefrontal lobe, depending on the task type. These findings suggest a promising application of multi-order FC with deep learning on BCI systems for the elderly |
Arechavala, Rebecca Johnson; Rochart, Roger; Kloner, Robert A; Liu, Anqi; Wu, Daw-An; Hung, Shao-Min; Shimojo, Shinsuke; Fonteh, Alfred N; Kleinman, Michael T; Harrington, Michael G; others, In: International Journal of Psychophysiology, vol. 170, pp. 102–111, 2021. @article{arechavala2021task, Electroencephalographic (EEG) alpha oscillations have been related to heart rate variability (HRV) and both change in Alzheimer's disease (AD). We explored if task switching reveals altered alpha power and HRV in cognitively healthy individuals with AD pathology in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and whether HRV improves the AD pathology classification by alpha power alone. We compared low and high alpha event-related desynchronization (ERD) and HRV parameters during task switch testing between two groups of cognitively healthy participants classified by CSF amyloid/tau ratio: normal (CH-NAT, n = 19) or pathological (CH-PAT, n = 27). For the task switching paradigm, participants were required to name the color or word for each colored word stimulus, with two sequential stimuli per trial. Trials include color (cC) or word (wW) repeats with low load repeating, and word (cW) or color switch (wC) for high load switching. HRV was assessed for RR interval, standard deviation of RR-intervals (SDNN) and root mean squared successive differences (RMSSD) in time domain, and low frequency (LF), high frequency (HF), and LF/HF ratio in frequency domain. Results showed that CH-PATs compared to CH-NATs presented: 1) increased (less negative) low alpha ERD during low load repeat trials and lower word switch cost (low alpha: p = 0.008, Cohen's d = −0.83, 95% confidence interval −1.44 to −0.22, and high alpha: p = 0.019, Cohen's d = −0.73, 95% confidence interval −1.34 to −0.13); 2) decreasing HRV from rest to task, suggesting hyper-activated sympatho-vagal responses. 3) CH-PATs classification by alpha ERD was improved by supplementing HRV signatures, supporting a potentially compromised brain-heart interoceptive regulation in CH-PATs. Further experiments are needed to validate these findings for clinical significance. |
Jung, Mijung; Lee, Mikyoung The Effect of a Mindfulness-Based Education Program on Brain Waves and the Autonomic Nervous System in University Students Journal Article In: Healthcare 2021, vol. 9, no. 11, pp. 1606, 2021. @article{jung2021effect, Background: Mindfulness, defined as the awareness emerging from purposefully paying attention to the present moment, has been shown to be effective in reducing stress and, thus, promoting psychological well-being. This study investigated the effects of a mindfulness-based education program on mindfulness, brain waves, and the autonomic nervous system (ANS) in university students in Korea. Methods: This study is a quantitative and experimental research with a single-group pre-post design. Six sessions of mindfulness-based intervention were applied. In total, 42 students completed a mindfulness questionnaire before and after the intervention, and 28 among them completed pre-intervention and post-intervention measures of brain waves and ANS. Results: The level of mindfulness increased in the participants after intervention. Regarding brain waves, the alpha and theta waves increased, but the beta waves decreased. There was no significant difference in the ANS, presenting no change in heart rate variability. Conclusions: We identified the positive effects of the mindfulness-based education program for university students. The findings indicate that this program may help students not only relax, but also generate a mindfulness state in stressful situations, potentially leading to a successful university life. This study can be used as a basis for quality improvement and sustainability of mindfulness-based education programs for university students. |
Seo, Ssang-Hee Derivation of EEG Spectrum-based Feature Parameters for Mental Fatigue Determination Journal Article In: Journal of Convergence for Information Technology, vol. 11, no. 10, pp. 10–19, 2021. @article{seo2021derivation, In this paper, we tried to derive characteristic parameters that reflect mental fatigue through EEG measurement and analysis. For this purpose, mental fatigue was induced through a resting state with eyes closed and performing subtraction operations in mental arithmetic for 30 minutes. Five subjects participated in the experiment, and all subjects were right-handed male students in university, with an average age of 25.5 years. Spectral analysis was performed on the EEG collected at the beginning and the end of the experiment to derive feature parameters reflecting mental fatigue. As a result of the analysis, the absolute power of the alpha band in the occipital lobe and the temporal lobe increased as the mental fatigue increased, while the relative power decreased. Also, the difference in power between resting state and task state showed that the relative power was larger than the absolute power. These results indicate that alpha relative power in the occipital lobe and temporal lobe is a feature parameter reflecting mental fatigue. The results of this study can be utilized as feature parameters for the development of an automated system for mental fatigue determination such as fatigue and drowsiness while driving. |
Chakravarty, Sumit; Xie, Ying; Le, Linh; Johnson, John; Hales, Michael Comparison Between Active and Passive Attention Using EEG Waves and Deep Neural Network Conference International Conference on Brain Informatics, vol. 12960, Springer 2021, ISBN: 978-3-030-86993-9. @conference{chakravarty2021comparison, A person’s state of attentiveness can be affected by various outside factors. Having energy, feeling tired, or even simply being distracted all play a role in someone’s level of attention. The task at hand can potentially affect the person’s attention or concentration level as well. In terms of students who take online courses, constantly watching lectures and conducting these courses solely online can cause lack of concentration or attention. Attention can be considered in two categories: passive or active. Conducting active and passive attention-based trials can reveal different states of attentiveness. This paper compares active and passive attention trial results of the two states, wide awake and tired. This has been done in order to uncover a difference in results between the two states. The data analyzed throughout this paper was collected from DSI 24 EEG equipment, and the generated EEG is processed through a 3D Convolutional Neural Network (CNN) to produce results. Three passive attention trials and three active attention trials were performed on seven subjects, while they were wide awake and when they were tired. The experiments on the preprocessed data results in accuracies as high as 81.78% for passive attention detection accuracy and 63.67% for active attention detection accuracy, which shown a clear ability to separate between the two attention categories. |
Lim, Hyunmi; Ku, Jeonghun Superior Facilitation of an Action Observation Network by Congruent Character Movements in Brain--Computer Interface Action-Observation Games Journal Article In: Cyberpsychology, Behavior, and Social Networking, vol. 24, no. 8, pp. 566–572, 2021. @article{lim2021superior, Action observation (AO) is a promising strategy for promoting motor function in neural rehabilitation. Recently, brain–computer interface (BCI)-AO game rehabilitation, which combines AO therapy with BCI technology, has been introduced to improve the effectiveness of rehabilitation. This approach can improve motor learning by providing feedback, which can be interactive in an observation task, and the game contents of the BCI-AO game paradigm can affect rehabilitation. In this study, the effects of congruent rather than incongruent feedback in a BCI-AO game on mirror neurons were investigated. Specifically, the mu suppression with congruent and incongruent BCI-AO games was measured in 17 healthy adults. The mu suppression in the central motor cortex was significantly higher with the congruent BCI-AO game than with the incongruent one. In addition, the satisfaction evaluation results were excellent for the congruent case. These results support the fact that providing feedback congruent with the motion of an action video facilitates mirror neuron activity and can offer useful guidelines for the design of BCI-AO games for rehabilitation |
Lin, Chun-Ling; Hsieh, Ya-Wen; Chen, Hui-Ya Age-related differences in alpha and beta band activity in sensory association brain areas during challenging sensory tasks Journal Article In: Behavioural Brain Research, vol. 408, pp. 113279, 2021. @article{lin2021age, Sensory challenges to postural balance are daily threats for elderly individuals. This study examined electroencephalography (EEG) in alpha and beta bands in sensory association areas during the Sensory Organization Test, involving withdrawal of visual or presenting misleading somatosensory inputs, in twelve young and twelve elderly participants. The results showed stepwise deterioration in behavioral performance in four conditions, with group effects that were amplified with combined sensory challenges. With eye closure, alpha and beta activities increased in all sensory association areas. Fast beta activity increased in the bilateral parietal-temporal-occipital areas. Misleading somatosensory information effects on EEG activity were of smaller amplitude than eye closure effects and in a different direction. Decreased alpha activity in left parietal-temporal-occipital areas and decreased beta and fast beta activities in bilateral parietal-temporal-occipital areas were significant. Elderly participants had increased fast beta activity in the left temporal-occipital and bilateral occipital areas, indicative of sustained efforts that they made in all sensory conditions. Similar to the young participants, elderly participants with eyes closed showed increased alpha activity, although to a smaller degree, in bilateral temporal-occipital and left occipital areas. This might indicate a lack of efficacy in redistributing relative sensory weights when elderly participants dealt with eye closure. In summary, EEG power changes did not match the stepwise deterioration in behavioral data, but reflected different sensory strategies adopted by young and elderly participants to cope with eye closure or misleading somatosensory information based on the efficacy of these different strategies. |
Fan, Chen-Chen; Xie, Haiqun; Peng, Liang; Yang, Hongjun; Ni, Zhen-Liang; Wang, Guanán; Zhou, Yan-Jie; Chen, Sheng; Fang, Zhijie; Huang, Shuyun; others, Group Feature Learning and Domain Adversarial Neural Network for aMCI Diagnosis System Based on EEG Conference 2021 International Conference on Robotics and Automation, 2021. @conference{fan2021group, Medical diagnostic robot systems have been paid more and more attention due to its objectivity and accuracy. The diagnosis of mild cognitive impairment (MCI) is considered an effective means to prevent Alzheimer's disease (AD). Doctors diagnose MCI based on various clinical examinations, which are expensive and the diagnosis results rely on the knowledge of doctors. Therefore, it is necessary to develop a robot diagnostic system to eliminate the influence of human factors and obtain a higher accuracy rate. In this paper, we propose a novel Group Feature Domain Adversarial Neural Network (GF-DANN) for amnestic MCI (aMCI) diagnosis, which involves two important modules. A Group Feature Extraction (GFE) module is proposed to reduce individual differences by learning group-level features through adversarial learning. A Dual Branch Domain Adaptation (DBDA) module is carefully designed to reduce the distribution difference between the source and target domain in a domain adaption way. On three types of data set, GF-DANN achieves the best accuracy compared with classic machine learning and deep learning methods. On the DMS data set, GF-DANN has obtained an accuracy rate of 89.47%, and the sensitivity and specificity are 90% and 89%. In addition, by comparing three EEG data collection paradigms, our results demonstrate that the DMS paradigm has the potential to build an aMCI diagnose robot system. |
Rustamov, Nabi; Sharma, Lokesh; Chiang, Sarah N; Burk, Carrie; Haroutounian, Simon; Leuthardt, Eric C Spatial and frequency-specific electrophysiological signatures of tonic pain recovery in humans Journal Article In: Neuroscience, vol. 465, pp. 23–37, 2021. @article{rustamov2021spatial, The objective of this study was to comprehensively investigate patterns of brain activities associated with pain recovery following experimental tonic pain in humans. Specific electrophysiological features of pain recovery may either be monitored or be modulated through neurofeedback (NF) as a novel chronic pain treatment. The cold pressor test was applied with simultaneous electroencephalogram (EEG) recording. EEG data were acquired, and analyzed to define: (1) EEG power topography patterns of pain recovery; (2) source generators of pain recovery at cortical level; (3) changes in functional connectivity associated with pain recovery; (4) features of phase-amplitude coupling (PAC) as it relates to pain recovery. The novel finding of this study is that recovery from pain was characterized by significant theta power rebound at the left fronto-central area. The sources of theta power over-recovery were located in the left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC), cingulate cortex, left insula and contralateral sensorimotor cortex. These effects were paralleled by theta band connectivity increase within hemispheres in a prefrontal–somatosensory network and interhemispherically between prefrontal and parietal areas. In addition, this study revealed significant reduction in PAC between theta/alpha and gamma oscillations during recovery period following tonic pain. These findings have largely been replicated across two identical sessions. Our study emphasizes the association between pain recovery and left lateral prefrontal theta power rebound, and significant over-recovery of functional connectivity in prefrontal-sensorimotor neural network synchronized at theta frequencies. These findings may provide basis for chronic pain treatment by modulating neural oscillations at theta frequencies in left prefrontal cortex. |
Kim, Sanghee; Park, Hyejin; Choo, Seungyeon Effects of Changes to Architectural Elements on Human Relaxation-Arousal Responses: Based on VR and EEG Journal Article In: International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, vol. 18, no. 8, pp. 4305, 2021. @article{kim2021effects, This study combines electroencephalogram (EEG) with virtual reality (VR) technologies to measure the EEG responses of users experiencing changes to architectural elements. We analyze the ratio of alpha to beta waves (RAB) indicators to determine the pre- and poststimulation changes. In our methodology, thirty-three females experience using private rooms in a postpartum care center participated in the experiment. Their brain waves are measured while they are experiencing the VR space of a private room in a postpartum care center. Three architectural elements (i.e., aspect ratio of space, ceiling height, and window ratio) are varied in the VR space. In addition, a self-report questionnaire is administered to examine whether the responses are consistent with the results of the EEG response analysis. As a result, statistically significant differences (p < 0.05) are observed in the changes in the RAB indicator values of the pre- and poststimulation EEG while the subjects are experiencing the VR space where the architectural elements are varied. That is, the effects of the changes to architectural elements on users’ relaxation-arousal responses are statistically verified. Notably, in all the RAB indicator values where significant differences are observed, the poststimulation RAB decreases in comparison to the prestimulus ratios, which is indicative of the arousal response. However, the arousal levels vary across the architectural elements, which implies it would be possible to find out the elements that could induce less arousal response using the proposed method. Moreover, following the experience in the VR space, certain lobes of the brain (F4 and P3 EEG channels) show statistically significant differences in the relaxation-arousal responses. Unlike previous studies, which measured users’ physiological responses to abstract and primordial spatial elements, this study extends the boundaries of the literature by applying the architectural elements applicable to design in practice |
Zhang, Dong Brain-Controlled Robotic Arm Based on Adaptive FBCCA Conference Human Brain and Artificial Intelligence: Second International Workshop, HBAI 2020, Held in Conjunction with IJCAI-PRICAI 2020, Yokohama, Japan, January 7, 2021, Revised Selected Papers, Springer Nature 2021. @conference{zhang2021brain, The SSVEP-BCI system usually uses a fixed calculation time and a static window stop method to decode the EEG signal, which reduces the efficiency of the system. In response to this problem, this paper uses an adaptive FBCCA algorithm, which uses Bayesian estimation to dynamically find the optimal data length for result prediction, adapts to the differences between different trials and different individuals, and effectively improves system operation effectiveness. At the same time, through this method, this paper constructs a brain-controlled robotic arm grasping life assistance system based on adaptive FBCCA. In this paper, we selected 20 subjects and conducted a total of 400 experiments. A large number of experiments have verified that the system is available and the average recognition success rate is 95.5%. This also proves that the system can be applied to actual scenarios. Help the handicapped to use the brain to control the mechanical arm to grab the needed items to assist in daily life and improve the quality of life. In the future, SSVEP’s adaptive FBCCA decoding algorithm can be combined with the motor imaging brain-computer interface decoding algorithm to build a corresponding system to help patients with upper or lower limb movement disorders caused by stroke diseases to recover, and reshape the brain and Control connection of limbs. |
Lim, Hyunmi; Ku, Jeonghun Effect of repetitive neurofeedback training on brain activation during hand exercise Conference 2021 9th International Winter Conference on Brain-Computer Interface (BCI), IEEE 2021, ISBN: 978-1-7281-8486-9. @conference{lim2021effect, In this study, we examined that neurofeedback training encouraging to make mu suppression over the motor cortex would effect on the brain activation of the motor cortex while performing hand movements. To investigate the effects of training with neurofeedback, we analyzed the pattern changes of the amount of the mu suppression during real hand movements just after every neurofeedback training. The healthy subjects were trained to increase the motor cortex activity by using motor imagery, specifically maximizing the difference of the mu power between C3 and C4 during neurofeedback training. We have observed that the changes of the mu suppression over the motor cortex become stronger as the neurofeedback training was repeated. These findings further suggest that motor imagery training using neurofeedback can be applied to patients with stroke or chronic neurological disorders. |
Eldeeb, Safaa; Susam, Busra T; Akcakaya, Murat; Conner, Caitlin M; White, Susan W; Mazefsky, Carla A Trial by trial EEG based BCI for distress versus non distress classification in individuals with ASD Journal Article In: Scientific Reports, vol. 11, no. 1, pp. 1–13, 2021. @article{eldeeb2021trial, Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is a neurodevelopmental disorder that is often accompanied by impaired emotion regulation (ER). There has been increasing emphasis on developing evidence-based approaches to improve ER in ASD. Electroencephalography (EEG) has shown success in reducing ASD symptoms when used in neurofeedback-based interventions. Also, certain EEG components are associated with ER. Our overarching goal is to develop a technology that will use EEG to monitor real-time changes in ER and perform intervention based on these changes. As a first step, an EEG-based brain computer interface that is based on an Affective Posner task was developed to identify patterns associated with ER on a single trial basis, and EEG data collected from 21 individuals with ASD. Accordingly, our aim in this study is to investigate EEG features that could differentiate between distress and non-distress conditions. Specifically, we investigate if the EEG time-locked to the visual feedback presentation could be used to classify between WIN (non-distress) and LOSE (distress) conditions in a game with deception. Results showed that the extracted EEG features could differentiate between WIN and LOSE conditions (average accuracy of 81%), LOSE and rest-EEG conditions (average accuracy 94.8%), and WIN and rest-EEG conditions (average accuracy 94.9%). |
Memmott, Tab; Koçanaoğullari, Aziz; Lawhead, Matthew; Klee, Daniel; Dudy, Shiran; Fried-Oken, Melanie; Oken, Barry BciPy: brain--computer interface software in Python Journal Article In: Brain-Computer Interfaces, pp. 1-18, 2021. @article{memmott2021bcipy, There are high technological and software demands associated with conducting Brain–Computer Interface (BCI) research. In order to accelerate the development and accessibility of BCIs, it is worthwhile to focus on open-source and community desired tooling. Python, a prominent computer language, has emerged as a language of choice for many research and engineering purposes. In this article, BciPy, an open-source, Python-based software for conducting BCI research is presented. It was developed with a focus on restoring communication using Event-Related Potential (ERP) spelling interfaces; however, it may be used for other non-spelling and non-ERP BCI paradigms. Major modules in this system include support for data acquisition, data queries, stimuli presentation, signal processing, signal viewing and modeling, language modeling, task building, and a simple Graphical User Interface (GUI). |
2020 |
Haar Millo, S; Faisal, A Brain Activity Reveals Multiple Motor-Learning Mechanisms in a Real-World Task Journal Article In: Frontiers in Human Neuroscience, vol. 14, pp. 354, 2020, ISBN: 1662-5161. @article{haarbrain, Many recent studies found signatures of motor learning in neural beta oscillations (13–30 Hz), and specifically in the post-movement beta rebound (PMBR). All these studies were in controlled laboratory-tasks in which the task designed to induce the studied learning mechanism. Interestingly, these studies reported opposing dynamics of the PMBR magnitude over learning for the error-based and reward-based tasks (increase vs. decrease, respectively). Here, we explored the PMBR dynamics during real-world motor-skill-learning in a billiards task using mobile-brain-imaging. Our EEG recordings highlight the opposing dynamics of PMBR magnitudes (increase vs. decrease) between different subjects performing the same task. The groups of subjects, defined by their neural dynamics, also showed behavioral differences expected for different learning mechanisms. Our results suggest that when faced with the complexity of the real-world different subjects might use different learning mechanisms for the same complex task. We speculate that all subjects combine multi-modal mechanisms of learning, but different subjects have different predominant learning mechanisms. |
Kim, Young-June; Park, Jin-Hong; Cho, Young-Suk; Kim, Keum-Sook In: Journal of Convergence for Information Technology, vol. 10, no. 8, pp. 203–212, 2020. @article{kim2020effect, The purpose of this study was to investigate the effects of cognitive rehabilitation programs using Virtual Reality(VR) content on the daily living abilities such as cognitive abilities, depression, and upper extremity functions of the elderly. The study group analyzed the effectiveness by separating the experimental group, which is the virtual reality cognitive rehabilitation application group, and the control group, the universal cognitive stimulation program application group. As a result of the study, the MMSE-K score improved by 13.0% in the experimental group and 2.3% in the control group. The improvement in each area of the experimental group was found to be 3.1% MBI, 7.1% MFT(Rt.), 3.5% MFT(Lt.), and 25.4% K-GDS. As a result of comparing the pre-post score change between each group, there was a significant difference between groups in daily living ability (p<.001) and MFT(Rt.)(p<.01). In addition, as a result of comparing the changes in absolute alpha waves to confirm the degree of depression through brain waves, there was no statistically significant difference. However, in the experimental group, it was confirmed that the average value increased to a positive value. This study is an experiment to verify the effectiveness of the cognitive rehabilitation program using virtual reality contents, and suggests a new intervention method to maintain and improve the daily life ability, cognitive function, depression and upper extremity function of the elderly. |
Lim, Hyunmi; Kim, Won-Seok; Ku, Jeonghun Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation Effect on Virtual Hand Illusion Journal Article In: Cyberpsychology, Behavior, and Social Networking, vol. 23, no. 8, pp. 541–549, 2020. @article{lim2020transcranial, Virtual reality (VR) is effectively used to evoke the mirror illusion, and transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) synergistically facilitates this illusion. This study investigated whether a mirror virtual hand illusion (MVHI) induced by an immersive, first-person-perspective, virtual mirror system could be modulated by tDCS of the primary motor cortex. Fourteen healthy adults (average age 21.86 years ±0.47, seven men and seven women) participated in this study, and they experienced VR with and without tDCS—the tDCS and sham conditions, each of which takes ∼30 minutes—on separate days to allow the washout of the tDCS effect. While experiencing VR, the movements of the virtual left hand reflected the flexion and extension of the real right hand. Subsequently, electroencephalogram was recorded, the magnitude of the proprioceptive shift was measured, and the participants provided responses to a questionnaire regarding hand ownership. A significant difference in the proprioceptive shift was observed between the tDCS and sham conditions. In addition, there was significant suppression of the mu power in Pz, and augmentation of the beta power in the Pz, P4, O1, and O2 channels. The difference in proprioceptive deviation between the two conditions showed significant negative correlation with mu suppression over the left frontal lobe in the tDCS condition. Finally, the question “I felt that the virtual hand was my own hand” received a significantly higher score under the tDCS condition. In short, applying tDCS over the motor cortex facilitates the MVHI by activating the attentional network over the parietal and frontal lobes such that the MVHI induces more proprioceptive drift, which suggests that the combination of VR and tDCS can enhance the immersive effect in VR. This result provides better support for the use of the MVHI paradigm in combination with tDCS for recovery from illnesses such as stroke. |
Son, Ji Eun; Choi, Hyoseon; Lim, Hyunmi; Ku, Jeonghun In: Technology and Health Care, vol. 28, no. S1, pp. 509-519, 2020. @article{son2020development, BACKGROUND: This study focused on developing an upper limb rehabilitation program. In this regard, a steady state visual evoked potential (SSVEP) triggered brain computer interface (BCI)-functional electrical stimulation (FES) based action observation game featuring a flickering action video was designed. OBJECTIVE: In particular, the synergetic effect of the game was investigated by combining the action observation paradigm with BCI based FES. METHODS: The BCI-FES system was contrasted under two conditions: with flickering action video and flickering noise video. In this regard, 11 right-handed subjects aged between 22–27 years were recruited. The differences in brain activation in response to the two conditions were examined. RESULTS: The results indicate that T3 and P3 channels exhibited greater Mu suppression in 8–13 Hz for the action video than the noise video. Furthermore, T4, C4, and P4 channels indicated augmented high beta (21–30 Hz) for the action in contrast to the noise video. Finally, T4 indicated suppressed low beta (14–20 Hz) for the action video in contrast to the noise video. CONCLUSION: The flickering action video based BCI-FES system induced a more synergetic effect on cortical activation than the flickering noise based system. |
Wang, Jiahui; Antonenko, Pavlo; Keil, Andreas; Dawson, Kara Converging subjective and psychophysiological measures of cognitive load to study the effects of instructor-present video Journal Article In: Mind, Brain, and Education, vol. 14, no. 3, pp. 279–291, 2020. @article{wang2020converging, Many online videos feature an instructor on the screen to improve learners' engagement; however, the influence of this design on learners' cognitive load is underexplored. This study investigates the effects of instructor presence on learners' processing of information using both subjective and psychophysiological measures of cognitive load. Sixty university students watched a statistics instructional video either with or without instructor presence, while the spontaneous electrical activity of their brain was recorded using electroencephalography (EEG). At the conclusion of the video, they also self-reported overall load, intrinsic load, extraneous load, and germane load they experienced during the video. Learning from the video was assessed via tests of retention and transfer. Results suggested the instructor-present video improved learners' ability to transfer information and was associated with a lower self-reported intrinsic and extraneous load. Event-related changes in theta band activity also indicated lower cognitive load with instructor-present video. |
Mahdid, Yacine; Lee, Uncheol; Blain-Moraes, Stefanie Assessing the Quality of Wearable EEG Systems Using Functional Connectivity Journal Article In: IEEE Access, vol. 8, pp. 193214–193225, 2020, ISSN: 2169-3536. @article{mahdid2020assessing, Assessing the data quality of wearable electroencephalogram (EEG) systems is critical to collecting reliable neurophysiological data in non-laboratory environments. To date, measures of signal quality and spectral characteristics have been used to characterize wearable EEG systems. We demonstrate that these traditional measures do not provide fine-grained differentiation between the performance of four popular wearable EEG systems (the Epoc+, OpenBCI, DSI-24 and Quick-30 Dry EEG). Using two computationally inexpensive metrics of undirected functional connectivity (phase lag index) and directed functional connectivity (directed phase lag index), we compare the integrity of the phase relationships captured by wearable systems to those recorded from a high-density research-grade EEG system (Electrical Geodesics Inc). Our results demonstrate that functional connectivity analyses provide additional discriminatory information about wearable EEG systems, with clear differentiation of the cosine similarity between research-grade functional connectivity patterns and those generated by each wearable system. We provide a freely available Matlab toolbox containing all metrics described in this paper such that researchers and non-experts interested in wearable EEG systems can easily assess the quality of systems not characterized in this study, thus advancing the translation of EEG research into non-laboratory settings. |
Islam, Md Shafiqul; El-Hajj, Ahmad M; Alawieh, Hussein; Dawy, Zaher; Abbas, Nabil; El-Imad, Jamil EEG mobility artifact removal for ambulatory epileptic seizure prediction applications Journal Article In: Biomedical Signal Processing and Control, vol. 55, pp. 101638, 2020, ISSN: 1746-8094. @article{islam2020eeg, Mobile monitoring of electroencephalogram (EEG) signals is prone to different sources of artifacts. Most importantly, motion-related artifacts present a major challenge hindering the clean acquisition of EEG data as they spread all over the scalp and across all frequency bands. This leads to additional complexity in the development of neurologically-oriented mobile health solutions. Among the top five most common neurological disorders, epilepsy has increasingly relied on EEG for diagnosis. Separate methods have been used to classify EEG segments in the context of epilepsy while reducing the existing mobility artifacts. This work specifically devises an approach to remove motion-related artifacts in the context of epilepsy. The proposed approach first includes the recording of EEG signals using a wearable EEG headset. The recorded signals are then colored by some motion artifacts generated in a lab-controlled experiment. This stage is followed by temporal and spectral characterization of the signals and artifact removal using independent component analysis (ICA). The proposed approach is tested using real clinical EEG data and results showed an average increase in accuracy of ∼9% in seizure detection and ∼24% in prediction. |
2019 |
Choi, Hyoseon; Lim, Hyunmi; Kim, Joon Woo; Kang, Youn Joo; Ku, Jeonghun Brain computer interface-based action observation game enhances mu suppression in patients with stroke Journal Article In: Electronics, vol. 8, no. 12, pp. 1466, 2019. @article{choi2019brain, Action observation (AO), based on the mirror neuron theory, is a promising strategy to promote motor cortical activation in neurorehabilitation. Brain computer interface (BCI) can detect a user’s intention and provide them with brain state-dependent feedback to assist with patient rehabilitation. We investigated the effects of a combined BCI-AO game on power of mu band attenuation in stroke patients. Nineteen patients with subacute stroke were recruited. A BCI-AO game provided real-time feedback to participants regarding their attention to a flickering action video using steady-state visual-evoked potentials. All participants watched a video of repetitive grasping actions under two conditions: (1) BCI-AO game and (2) conventional AO, in random order. In the BCI-AO game, feedback on participants’ observation scores and observation time was provided. In conventional AO, a non-flickering video and no feedback were provided. The magnitude of mu suppression in the central motor, temporal, parietal, and occipital areas was significantly higher in the BCI-AO game than in the conventional AO. The magnitude of mu suppression was significantly higher in the BCI-AO game than in the conventional AO both in the affected and unaffected hemispheres. These results support the facilitatory effects of the BCI-AO game on mu suppression over conventional AO |
Apthorp, Deborah The drive to unlock the secrets of Parkinson's disease Online University of New England 2019, visited: 21.03.2019. @online{Apthorp2019, A team at the University of New England is moving closer - literally - to solving the mystery of how Parkinson's disease progresses, and rural Australians will soon play their part. |
Lim, Hyunmi; Ku, Jeonghun Multiple-command single-frequency SSVEP-based BCI system using flickering action video Journal Article In: Journal of Neuroscience Methods, vol. 314, pp. 21-27, 2019. @article{lim2019multiple, Background The number of commands in a brain–computer interface (BCI) system is important. This study proposes a new BCI technique to increase the number of commands in a single BCI system without loss of accuracy. New method We expected that a flickering action video with left and right elbow movements could simultaneously activate the different pattern of event-related desynchronization (ERD) according to the video contents (e.g., left or right) and steady-state visually evoked potential (SSVEP). The classification accuracy to discriminate left, right, and rest states was compared under the three following feature combinations: SSVEP power (19–21 Hz), Mu power (8–13 Hz), and simultaneous SSVEP and Mu power. Results The SSVEP feature could discriminate the stimulus condition, regardless of left or right, from the rest condition, while the Mu feature discriminated left or right, but was relatively poor in discriminating stimulus from rest. However, combining the SSVEP and Mu features, which were evoked by the stimulus with a single frequency, showed superior performance for discriminating all the stimuli among rest, left, or right. Comparison with the existing method The video contents could activate the ERD differently, and the flickering component increased its accuracy, such that it revealed a better performance to discriminate when considering together. Conclusions This paradigm showed possibility of increasing performance in terms of accuracy and number of commands with a single frequency by applying flickering action video paradigm and applicability to rehabilitation systems used by patients to facilitate their mirror neuron systems while training. |
Arakaki, Xianghong; Lee, Ryan; King, Kevin S; Fonteh, Alfred N; Harrington, Michael G Alpha desynchronization during simple working memory unmasks pathological aging in cognitively healthy individuals Journal Article In: PloS one, vol. 14, no. 1, pp. e0208517, 2019. @article{arakaki2019alpha, Our aim is to explore if cognitive challenge combined with objective physiology can reveal abnormal frontal alpha event-related desynchronization (ERD), in early Alzheimer’s disease (AD). We used quantitative electroencephalography (qEEG) to investigate brain activities during N-back working memory (WM) processing at two different load conditions (N = 0 or 2) in an aging cohort. We studied 60–100 year old participants, with normal cognition, and who fits one of two subgroups from cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) proteins: cognitively healthy (CH) with normal amyloid/tau ratio (CH-NAT, n = 10) or pathological amyloid/tau ratio (CH-PAT, n = 14). We recorded behavioral performances, and analyzed alpha power and alpha spectral entropy (SE) at three occasions: during the resting state, and at event-related desynchronization (ERD) [250 ~ 750 ms] during 0-back and 2-back. During 0-back WM testing, the behavioral performance was similar between the two groups, however, qEEG notably differentiated CH-PATs from CH-NATs on the simple, 0-back testing: Alpha ERD decreased from baseline only in the parietal region in CH-NATs, while it decreased in all brain regions in CH-PATs. Alpha SE did not change in CH-NATs, but was increased from baseline in the CH-PATs in frontal and left lateral regions (p<0.01), and was higher in the frontal region (p<0.01) of CH-PATs compared to CH-NATs. The alpha ERD and SE analyses suggest there is frontal lobe dysfunction during WM processing in the CH-PAT stage. Additional power and correlations with behavioral performance were also explored. This study provide pilot information to further evaluate whether this biomarker has clinical significance. |
2018 |
Camp, Marieke Van; Boeck, Muriel De; Verwulgen, Stijn; Bruyne, Guido De EEG Technology for UX Evaluation: A Multisensory Perspective Conference International Conference on Applied Human Factors and Ergonomics, vol. 775, Springer Advances in Intelligent Systems and Computing , 2018. @conference{van2018eeg, Along with a growing interest in experience-driven design, interest in measuring user experience has progressively increased. This study explores the use of EEG for empirical UX evaluation. A first experimental test was conducted to measure and understand the effect of sensory stimuli on the user experience. A first experimental test was carried out with eight participants. A series of videos, eliciting positive and negative emotional responses, were presented to the participants. Subsequently, auditory stimuli were introduced and the effect on the user experience was evaluated using EEG measurements techniques and analysis software. After the tests the participants were questioned to verify whether the subjective results matched the objective measurements. |
Memmott, Tab; Eddy, Brandon; Dabiri, Sina; Erdogmus, Deniz; Fried-Oken, Melanie; Oken, Barry Automated and self-report measures of drowsiness over successive calibrations in a brain-computer interface for communication Journal Article In: Clinical Neurophysiology, vol. 129, pp. e61–e62, 2018. @article{memmott2018t154, Brain computer interfaces (BCI) generally require the user to maintain an attentive state. Potential end-users with severe speech and physical impairments may have limited communication abilities to report their current state, thus an automatic calculation of state may improve performance. It’s not yet known if an effective automatic calculation of drowsiness can be detected reliably in end-user populations or healthy controls. |
Arakaki, Xianghong; Shoga, Michael; Li, Lianyang; Zouridakis, George; Tran, Thao; Fonteh, Alfred N; Dawlaty, Jessica; Goldweber, Robert; Pogoda, Janice M; Harrington, Michael G Alpha desynchronization/synchronization during working memory testing is compromised in acute mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) Journal Article In: PloS one, vol. 13, no. 2, pp. e0188101, 2018. @article{arakaki2018alpha, Diagnosing and monitoring recovery of patients with mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) is challenging because of the lack of objective, quantitative measures. Diagnosis is based on description of injuries often not witnessed, subtle neurocognitive symptoms, and neuropsychological testing. Since working memory (WM) is at the center of cognitive functions impaired in mTBI, this study was designed to define objective quantitative electroencephalographic (qEEG) measures of WM processing that may correlate with cognitive changes associated with acute mTBI. First-time mTBI patients and mild peripheral (limb) trauma controls without head injury were recruited from the emergency department. WM was assessed by a continuous performance task (N-back). EEG recordings were obtained during N-back testing on three occasions: within five days, two weeks, and one month after injury. Compared with controls, mTBI patients showed abnormal induced and evoked alpha activity including event-related desynchronization (ERD) and synchronization (ERS). For induced alpha power, TBI patients had excessive frontal ERD on their first and third visit. For evoked alpha, mTBI patients had lower parietal ERD/ERS at the second and third visits. These exploratory qEEG findings offer new and non-invasive candidate measures to characterize the evolution of injury over the first month, with potential to provide much-needed objective measures of brain dysfunction to diagnose and monitor the consequences of mTBI. |
2017 |
Hunter, Aimee M; Nghiem, Thien X; Cook, Ian A; Krantz, David E; Minzenberg, Michael J; Leuchter, Andrew F In: Clinical EEG and Neuroscience, vol. 49, no. 5, pp. 306–315, 2017. @article{hunter2018change, Repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) has demonstrated efficacy in major depressive disorder (MDD), although clinical outcome is variable. Change in the resting-state quantitative electroencephalogram (qEEG), particularly in theta cordance early in the course of treatment, has been linked to antidepressant medication outcomes but has not been examined extensively in clinical rTMS. This study examined change in theta cordance over the first week of clinical rTMS and sought to identify a biomarker that would predict outcome at the end of 6 weeks of treatment. Clinically stable outpatients (n = 18) received nonblinded rTMS treatment administered to the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC). Treatment parameters (site, intensity, number of pulses) were adjusted on an ongoing basis guided by changes in symptom severity rating scale scores. qEEGs were recorded at pretreatment baseline and after 1 week of left DLPFC (L-DLPFC) rTMS using a 21-channel dry-electrode headset. Analyses examined the association between week 1 regional changes in theta band (4-8 Hz) cordance, and week 6 patient- and physician-rated outcomes. Theta cordance change in the central brain region predicted percent change in Inventory of Depressive Symptomology–Self-Report (IDS-SR) score, and improvement versus nonimprovement on the Clinical Global Impression–Improvement Inventory (CGI-I) (R2 = .38, P = .007; and Nagelkerke R2 = .78, P = .0001, respectively). The cordance biomarker remained significant when controlling for age, gender, and baseline severity. Treatment-emergent change in EEG theta cordance in the first week of rTMS may predict acute (6-week) treatment outcome in MDD. This oscillatory synchrony biomarker merits further study in independent samples. |
Mills, Caitlin; Fridman, Igor; Soussou, Walid; Waghray, Disha; Olney, Andrew M; D'Mello, Sidney K Put your thinking cap on: detecting cognitive load using EEG during learning Conference Proceedings of the Seventh International Learning Analytics & Knowledge Conference, 2017. @conference{mills2017put, Current learning technologies have no direct way to assess students' mental effort: are they in deep thought, struggling to overcome an impasse, or are they zoned out? To address this challenge, we propose the use of EEG-based cognitive load detectors during learning. Despite its potential, EEG has not yet been utilized as a way to optimize instructional strategies. We take an initial step towards this goal by assessing how experimentally manipulated (easy and difficult) sections of an intelligent tutoring system (ITS) influenced EEG-based estimates of students' cognitive load. We found a main effect of task difficulty on EEG-based cognitive load estimates, which were also correlated with learning performance. Our results show that EEG can be a viable source of data to model learners' mental states across a 90-minute session. |
2016 |
Halford, Jonathan J; Schalkoff, Robert J; Satterfield, Kevin E; Martz, Gabriel U; Kutluay, Ekrem; Waters, Chad G; Dean, Brian C Comparison of a Novel Dry Electrode Headset to Standard Routine EEG in Veterans Journal Article In: Journal of Clinical Neurophysiology, vol. 33, no. 6, pp. 530–537, 2016. @article{halford2016comparison, Objective: This purpose of this study was to evaluate the usefulness of a prototype battery-powered dry electrode system (DES) EEG recording headset in Veteran patients by comparing it with standard EEG. Methods: Twenty-one Veterans had both a standard electrode system recording and DES recording in nine different patient states at the same encounter. Setup time, patient comfort, and subject preference were measured. Three experts performed technical quality rating of each EEG recording in a blinded fashion using the web-based EEGnet system. Power spectra were compared between DES and standard electrode system recordings. Results: The average time for DES setup was 5.7 minutes versus 21.1 minutes for standard electrode system. Subjects reported that the DES was more comfortable during setup. Most subjects (15 of 21) preferred the DES. On a five-point scale (1—best quality to 5—worst quality), the technical quality of the standard electrode system recordings was significantly better than for the DES recordings, at 1.25 versus 2.41 (P < 0.0001). But experts found that 87% of the DES EEG segments were of sufficient technical quality to be interpretable. Conclusions: This DES offers quick and easy setup and is well tolerated by subjects. Although the technical quality of DES recordings was less than standard EEG, most of the DES recordings were rated as interpretable by experts. Significance: This DES, if improved, could be useful for a telemedicine approach to outpatient routine EEG recording within the Veterans Administration or other health system. |
Arakaki, Xianghong; Shoga, Michael; Li, Lianyang; Zouridakis, George; Rostami, Ramona; Goldweber, Robert; Harrington, Michael Exploring neuroplasticity in acute mild traumatic brain injury Journal Article In: The FASEB Journal, vol. 30, pp. 992–4, 2016. @article{arakaki2016exploring, Objectives To explore neuroplasticity in a longitudinal study of acute mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI). Methods We are using quantitative electroencephalography (qEEG) and magnetoencephalography (MEG) during the resting state and during cognitive brain stress to explore neuroplasticity in an ongoing acute mild traumatic brain injury research. Acute mTBI patients are recruited from the emergency department of Huntington Memorial Hospital in Pasadena, CA, and controls are non‐head‐trauma patients. Brain stress includes the N‐back (0‐back and 2‐back) working memory test and Color‐Word Interference Test (CWIT), administered using E‐prime software. Data were collected at three time points: within 1 week of injury, 14 days, and 30 days after injury. Behavioral as well as MEG and qEEG analysis are performed to compare the two groups. Results Resting MEG detected low frequency activity in the mTBI group, consistent with previous publications. N‐back, in particular during 2‐back trials, and CWIT, in particular during incongruent trials, both show initial executive function impairment that improved on later visits. Time frequency analysis suggested corresponding compromised brain activity. Conclusions The EEG/MEG recordings during rest and brain stress are objective and sensitive to neuroplasticity in acute mTBI, and could be potential objective mTBI markers. |
2015 |
Kang, Dayoon; Kim, Jinsoo; Jang, Dong-Pyo; Cho, Yang Seok; Kim, Sung-Phil Investigation of engagement of viewers in movie trailers using electroencephalography Journal Article In: Brain-Computer Interfaces, vol. 2, no. 4, pp. 193–201, 2015. @article{kang2015investigation, Brain-computer interfaces (BCIs) have been focused on providing direct communications to the disabled. Recently, BCI researchers have expanded BCI applications to non-medical uses and categorized them as active BCI, reactive BCI, and passive BCI. Neurocinematics, a new application of reactive BCIs, aims to understand viewers’ cognitive and affective responses to movies from neural activity, providing more objective information than traditional subjective self-reports. However, studies on analytical indices for neurocinematics have verified their indices by comparisons with self-reports. To overcome this contradictory issue, we proposed using an independent psychophysical index to evaluate a neural engagement index (NEI). We made use of the secondary task reaction time (STRT), which measures participants’ engagement in a primary task by their reaction time to a secondary task; here, responding to a tactile stimulus was the secondary task and watching a movie trailer was the primary task. NEI was developed as changes in the difference between frontal beta and alpha activity of EEG. We evaluated movie trailers using NEI, STRT, and self-reports and found a significant correlation between STRT and NEI across trailers but no correlation between any of the self-report results and STRT or NEI. Our results suggest that NEI developed for neurocinematics may conform well with more objective psychophysical assessments but not with subjective self-reports. |
Li, Lianyang; Pagnotta, Mattia F; Arakaki, Xianghong; Tran, Thao; Strickland, David; Harrington, Michael; Zouridakis, George Brain activation profiles in mTBI: Evidence from combined resting-state EEG and MEG activity Conference 2015 37th Annual International Conference of the IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society (EMBC), IEEE IEEE, Milan, Italy, 2015, ISSN: 1558-4615. @conference{li2015brain, In this study, we compared the brain activation profiles obtained from resting state Electroencephalographic (EEG) and Magnetoencephalographic (MEG) activity in six mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) patients and five orthopedic controls, using power spectral density (PSD) analysis. We first estimated intracranial dipolar EEG/MEG sources on a dense grid on the cortical surface and then projected these sources on a standardized atlas with 68 regions of interest (ROIs). Averaging the PSD values of all sources in each ROI across all control subjects resulted in a normative database that was used to convert the PSD values of mTBI patients into z-scores in eight distinct frequency bands. We found that mTBI patients exhibited statistically significant overactivation in the delta, theta, and low alpha bands. Additionally, the MEG modality seemed to better characterize the group of individual subjects. These findings suggest that resting-state EEG/MEG activation maps may be used as specific biomarkers that can help with the diagnosis of and assess the efficacy of intervention in mTBI patients. |
2014 |
Hairston, David W; Whitaker, Keith W; Ries, Anthony J; Vettel, Jean M; Bradford, Cortney J; Kerick, Scott E; McDowell, Kaleb Usability of four commercially-oriented EEG systems Journal Article In: Journal of Neural Engineering, vol. 11, no. 4, pp. 046018, 2014. @article{hairston2014usability, Electroencephalography (EEG) holds promise as a neuroimaging technology that can be used to understand how the human brain functions in real-world, operational settings while individuals move freely in perceptually-rich environments. In recent years, several EEG systems have been developed that aim to increase the usability of the neuroimaging technology in real-world settings. Here, the usability of three wireless EEG systems from different companies are compared to a conventional wired EEG system, BioSemi's ActiveTwo, which serves as an established laboratory-grade 'gold standard' baseline. The wireless systems compared include Advanced Brain Monitoring's B-Alert X10, Emotiv Systems' EPOC and the 2009 version of QUASAR's Dry Sensor Interface 10–20. The design of each wireless system is discussed in relation to its impact on the system's usability as a potential real-world neuroimaging system. Evaluations are based on having participants complete a series of cognitive tasks while wearing each of the EEG acquisition systems. This report focuses on the system design, usability factors and participant comfort issues that arise during the experimental sessions. In particular, the EEG systems are assessed on five design elements: adaptability of the system for differing head sizes, subject comfort and preference, variance in scalp locations for the recording electrodes, stability of the electrical connection between the scalp and electrode, and timing integration between the EEG system, the stimulus presentation computer and other external events. |
2012 |
Soussou, Walid; Rooksby, Michael; Forty, Charles; Weatherhead, James; Marshall, Sandra EEG and eye-tracking based measures for enhanced training Conference 2012 Annual International Conference of the IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society, IEEE 2012, ISSN: 1557-170X. @conference{soussou2012eeg, This paper describes a project whose goal was to establish the feasibility of using unobtrusive cognitive assessment methodologies in order to optimize efficiency and expediency of training. QUASAR, EyeTracking, Inc. (ETI), and Safe Passage International (SPI), teamed to demonstrate correlation between EEG and eye-tracking based cognitive workload, performance assessment and subject expertise on XRay screening tasks. Results indicate significant correlation between cognitive workload metrics based on EEG and eye-tracking measurements recorded during a simulated baggage screening task and subject expertise and error rates in that same task. These results suggest that cognitive monitoring could be useful in improving training efficiency by enabling training paradigms that adapts to increasing expertise. |
2010 |
Estepp, Justin R; Monnin, Jason W; Christensen, James C; Wilson, Glenn F Evaluation of a Dry Electrode System for Electroencephalography: Applications for Psychophysiological Cognitive Workload Assessment Journal Article In: vol. 54, no. 3, pp. 210–214, 2010. @article{estepp2010evaluation, Advances in state-of-the-art dry electrode technology have led to the development of a novel dry electrode system for electroencephalography (QUASAR, Inc.; San Diego, California, USA). While basic systems-level testing and comparison of this dry electrode system to conventional wet electrode systems has proved to be very favorable, very limited data has been collected that demonstrates the ability of QUASAR's dry electrode system to replicate results produced in more applied, dynamic testing environments that may be used for human factors applications. In this study, QUASAR's dry electrode headset was used in combination with traditional wet electrodes to determine the ability of the dry electrode system to accurately differentiate between varying levels of cognitive workload. Results show that the accuracy in cognitive workload assessment obtained with wet electrodes is comparable to that obtained with the dry electrodes. |
Antonenko, Pavlo; Paas, Fred; Grabner, Roland; Gog, Tamara Van Using Electroencephalography to Measure Cognitive Load Journal Article In: Educational Psychology Review, vol. 22, no. 4, pp. 425–438, 2010. @article{antonenko2010using, Application of physiological methods, in particular electroencephalography (EEG), offers new and promising approaches to educational psychology research. EEG is identified as a physiological index that can serve as an online, continuous measure of cognitive load detecting subtle fluctuations in instantaneous load, which can help explain effects of instructional interventions when measures of overall cognitive load fail to reflect such differences in cognitive processing. This paper presents a review of seminal literature on the use of continuous EEG to measure cognitive load and describes two case studies on learning from hypertext and multimedia that employed EEG methodology to collect and analyze cognitive load data. |
Fielder, James Electroencephalogram (EEG) Study of Learning Effects across Addition Problems Technical Report PEBL Technical Report Series 2010. @techreport{fielder2010electroencephalogram, |
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