This study provides a comprehensive test of the head-related impulse response (HRIR) to an auditory spatial speller brain-computer interface (BCI) paradigm, including a comparison with a conventional virtual headphone-based spatial auditory modality. Five BCI-naive users participated in an experiment based on five Japanese vowels. The auditory evoked potentials obtained produced encouragingly good and stable P300-responses in online BCI experiments. Our case study indicates that the auditory HRIR spatial sound paradigm reproduced with headphones could be a viable alternative to established multi-loudspeaker surround sound BCI-speller applications.
Cite
@article{arxiv.1404.3958,
title = {Head-related Impulse Response-based Spatial Auditory Brain-computer Interface},
author = {Chisaki Nakaizumi and Toshie Matsui and Koichi Mori and Shoji Makino and Tomasz M. Rutkowski},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1404.3958},
year = {2014}
}
Comments
5 pages, 1 figure, submitted to 6th International Brain-Computer Interface Conference 2014, Graz, Austria