Publications by authors named "Carolyn Schwendeman"

Neural wearables can enable life-saving drowsiness and health monitoring for pilots and drivers. While existing in-cabin sensors may provide alerts, wearables can enable monitoring across more environments. Current neural wearables are promising but most require wet-electrodes and bulky electronics.

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Drowsiness monitoring can reduce workplace and driving accidents. To enable a discreet device for drowsiness monitoring and detection, this work presents a drowsiness user-study with an in-ear EEG system, which uses two user-generic, dry electrode earpieces and a wireless interface for streaming data. Twenty-one drowsiness trials were recorded across five human users and drowsiness detection was implemented with three classifier models: logistic regression, support vector machine (SVM), and random forest.

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In the past few years it has been demonstrated that electroencephalography (EEG) can be recorded from inside the ear (in-ear EEG). To open the door to low-profile earpieces as wearable brain-computer interfaces (BCIs), this work presents a practical in-ear EEG device based on multiple dry electrodes, a user-generic design, and a lightweight wireless interface for streaming data and device programming. The earpiece is designed for improved ear canal contact across a wide population of users and is fabricated in a low-cost and scalable manufacturing process based on standard techniques such as vacuum forming, plasma-treatment, and spray coating.

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