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Brain–Computer Interface Software: A Review and Discussion

Pierce Stegman, Chris Crawford, Marvin Andujar, Anton Nijholt, Juan E. Gilbert

2020IEEE Transactions on Human-Machine Systems71 citationsDOI

Abstract

Software is a critical component of brain-computer interfaces (BCIs). While BCI hardware enables the retrieval of brain signals, BCI software is required to analyze these signals, produce output, and provide feedback. Users from multiple research areas have adopted BCI software platforms to investigate various concepts. Recently, interest in web-based BCI software has also emerged. The system design and control signal techniques of state-of-the-art BCI software platforms have been previously investigated. However, there is limited literature discussing user adoption of BCI software platforms. Additionally, there is a lack of work discussing the recent emergence of web tools relevant to BCI applications. This article aims to address these gaps by presenting a bibliometric review of the state-of-the-art BCI software. Furthermore, we discuss web-based BCIs and present tools that may be used to develop future web-based BCI applications.

Topics & Concepts

Brain–computer interfaceComputer scienceSoftwareInterface (matter)Human–computer interactionComponent-based software engineeringComponent (thermodynamics)Software developmentSoftware engineeringElectroencephalographyOperating systemMaximum bubble pressure methodBubblePsychiatryPsychologyThermodynamicsPhysicsEEG and Brain-Computer InterfacesNeuroscience and Neural EngineeringAdvanced Memory and Neural Computing
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