Standardization of protocol design for user training in EEG-based Brain-Computer Interface
Jelena Mladenović
Abstract
period (before BCI interaction) must be considered as equally important as the BCI interaction for user training. To support this claim, an extensive literature review demonstrates that BCI performance can depend on the methodologies presented in such introductory period. To standardize its design, the user training models from human-computer interaction field are adjusted to the BCI context. Second, during the user-BCI interaction, the interface can take a large spectrum of forms (2D, 3D, size, colour etc) and modalities (visual, auditory or haptic etc) without following any design standard or guidelines. Namely, studies that explore perceptual affordance on neural activity, show that motor neurons can be triggered from a simple observation of certain objects, and depending on objects' properties (size, location etc) neural reactions can vary greatly. Surprisingly, the effects of perceptual affordance were not investigated in the BCI context. Both inconsistent introductions to BCI as well as variable interface designs make it difficult to reproduce experiments, predict their outcomes and compare results between them. To address these issues, a protocol design standardization for BCI user training is proposed.