Litcius/Paper detail

A Review of Online Classification Performance in Motor Imagery-Based Brain–Computer Interfaces for Stroke Neurorehabilitation

Athanasios Vavoulis, Patrícia Figueiredo, Athanasios Vourvopoulos

2023Signals40 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Motor imagery (MI)-based brain–computer interfaces (BCI) have shown increased potential for the rehabilitation of stroke patients; nonetheless, their implementation in clinical practice has been restricted due to their low accuracy performance. To date, although a lot of research has been carried out in benchmarking and highlighting the most valuable classification algorithms in BCI configurations, most of them use offline data and are not from real BCI performance during the closed-loop (or online) sessions. Since rehabilitation training relies on the availability of an accurate feedback system, we surveyed articles of current and past EEG-based BCI frameworks who report the online classification of the movement of two upper limbs in both healthy volunteers and stroke patients. We found that the recently developed deep-learning methods do not outperform the traditional machine-learning algorithms. In addition, patients and healthy subjects exhibit similar classification accuracy in current BCI configurations. Lastly, in terms of neurofeedback modality, functional electrical stimulation (FES) yielded the best performance compared to non-FES systems.

Topics & Concepts

Brain–computer interfaceNeurorehabilitationMotor imageryNeurofeedbackFunctional electrical stimulationRehabilitationPhysical medicine and rehabilitationComputer scienceElectroencephalographyModality (human–computer interaction)Machine learningArtificial intelligencePsychologyMedicineNeuroscienceStimulationEEG and Brain-Computer InterfacesNeuroscience and Neural EngineeringAdvanced Memory and Neural Computing