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Improving user experience of SSVEP BCI through low amplitude depth and high frequency stimuli design

Simon Ladouce, Ludovic Darmet, Juan Jesús Torre, Sébastien Velut, Giuseppe Ferraro, Frédéric Dehais

2022Scientific Reports77 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Steady-States Visually Evoked Potentials (SSVEP) refer to the sustained rhythmic activity observed in surface electroencephalography (EEG) in response to the presentation of repetitive visual stimuli (RVS). Due to their robustness and rapid onset, SSVEP have been widely used in Brain Computer Interfaces (BCI). However, typical SSVEP stimuli are straining to the eyes and present risks of triggering epileptic seizures. Reducing visual stimuli contrast or extending their frequency range both appear as relevant solutions to address these issues. It however remains sparsely documented how BCI performance is impacted by these features and to which extent user experience can be improved. We conducted two studies to systematically characterize the effects of frequency and amplitude depth reduction on SSVEP response. The results revealed that although high frequency stimuli improve visual comfort, their classification performance were not competitive enough to design a reliable/responsive BCI. Importantly, we found that the amplitude depth reduction of low frequency RVS is an effective solution to improve user experience while maintaining high classification performance. These findings were further validated by an online T9 SSVEP-BCI in which stimuli with 40% amplitude depth reduction achieved comparable results (>90% accuracy) to full amplitude stimuli while significantly improving user experience.

Topics & Concepts

Brain–computer interfaceComputer scienceAmplitudeSpeech recognitionElectroencephalographyAudiologyHuman–computer interactionNeurosciencePsychologyMedicinePhysicsOpticsEEG and Brain-Computer InterfacesGaze Tracking and Assistive TechnologyNeural dynamics and brain function
Improving user experience of SSVEP BCI through low amplitude depth and high frequency stimuli design | Litcius