Litcius/Paper detail

Advances in P300 brain–computer interface spellers: toward paradigm design and performance evaluation

Jiahui Pan, Xuening Chen, Nianming Ban, Jiashao He, Jiayi Chen, Haiyun Huang

2022Frontiers in Human Neuroscience49 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

A brain-computer interface (BCI) is a non-muscular communication technology that provides an information exchange channel for our brains and external devices. During the decades, BCI has made noticeable progress and has been applied in many fields. One of the most traditional BCI applications is the BCI speller. This article primarily discusses the progress of research into P300 BCI spellers and reviews four types of P300 spellers: single-modal P300 spellers, P300 spellers based on multiple brain patterns, P300 spellers with multisensory stimuli, and P300 spellers with multiple intelligent techniques. For each type of P300 speller, we further review several representative P300 spellers, including their design principles, paradigms, algorithms, experimental performance, and corresponding advantages. We particularly emphasized the paradigm design ideas, including the overall layout, individual symbol shapes and stimulus forms. Furthermore, several important issues and research guidance for the P300 speller were identified. We hope that this review can assist researchers in learning the new ideas of these novel P300 spellers and enhance their practical application capability.

Topics & Concepts

Brain–computer interfaceComputer scienceInterface (matter)Human–computer interactionStimulus (psychology)NeuroscienceElectroencephalographyPsychologyCognitive psychologyMaximum bubble pressure methodParallel computingBubbleEEG and Brain-Computer InterfacesAdvanced Memory and Neural ComputingNeuroscience and Neural Engineering