AI Article Synopsis

  • Developed a large intuitive dataset for 11 upper extremity movement tasks using various neurophysiological signals from 25 participants, addressing the need for more extensive data in brain-computer interface (BCI) research.
  • Validated the dataset through neurophysiological analysis, showing distinct sensorimotor responses and confirming consistency with machine learning classification methods.
  • The study provides valuable resources for enhancing BCI decoding performance, facilitating comparisons between real movements and motor imagery, and analyzing session variability, aiming to advance BCI technology.

Article Abstract

Background: Non-invasive brain-computer interfaces (BCIs) have been developed for realizing natural bi-directional interaction between users and external robotic systems. However, the communication between users and BCI systems through artificial matching is a critical issue. Recently, BCIs have been developed to adopt intuitive decoding, which is the key to solving several problems such as a small number of classes and manually matching BCI commands with device control. Unfortunately, the advances in this area have been slow owing to the lack of large and uniform datasets. This study provides a large intuitive dataset for 11 different upper extremity movement tasks obtained during multiple recording sessions. The dataset includes 60-channel electroencephalography, 7-channel electromyography, and 4-channel electro-oculography of 25 healthy participants collected over 3-day sessions for a total of 82,500 trials across all the participants.

Findings: We validated our dataset via neurophysiological analysis. We observed clear sensorimotor de-/activation and spatial distribution related to real-movement and motor imagery, respectively. Furthermore, we demonstrated the consistency of the dataset by evaluating the classification performance of each session using a baseline machine learning method.

Conclusions: The dataset includes the data of multiple recording sessions, various classes within the single upper extremity, and multimodal signals. This work can be used to (i) compare the brain activities associated with real movement and imagination, (ii) improve the decoding performance, and (iii) analyze the differences among recording sessions. Hence, this study, as a Data Note, has focused on collecting data required for further advances in the BCI technology.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7539536PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/gigascience/giaa098DOI Listing

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