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Scalp electroencephalography (EEG) is a neural source signal that is extensively used in neuroengineering due to its non-invasive nature and ease of collection. However, a drawback to the use of EEG is the prevalence of physiological artifacts generated by eye movements and eye blinks that contaminate the brain signals. Previously, we have proposed and validated an H ∞ -based Adaptive Noise Cancellation (ANC) technique for the real-time identification, learning and removal of eye blinks, eye motions, amplitude drifts and recording biases from EEG simultaneously. However, the standard electroocu- lography (EOG) electrode configuration requires four elec- trodes for EOG measurement, which limits its applicability for reduced-channel mobile applications, such as brain-computer interfaces (BCI). Here, we assess multiple configurations with varying number of EOG electrodes and compare the ANC effectiveness of these configurations to the ideal four-electrode configuration. From an analysis of the root mean squared error (RMSE) and differences in signal to noise ratios (SNR) between the ideal four-electrode case and the alternative configurations, it is reported that several three-electrode alternative configu- rations were effective in essentially replicating the ability to remove EOG artifacts in an experimental cohort of ten healthy subjects. For nine subjects, it was shown that only two to three EOG electrodes were needed to achieve similar performance as compared to the four-electrode case. This study demonstrates that the typical four-electrode configuration for EOG recordings for adaptive noise cancellation of ocular artifacts may not be necessary; by using the proposed new EOG configurations it is possible to improve electrode allocation efficiency for EOG measurements in mobile EEG applications.more » « less
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The use of scalp electroencephalography (EEG) signals for brain-computer interface (BCI) to control end effectors in real time, while providing mobile capabilities for use at home neurorehabilitation, requires of software and hardware robust solutions. Moreover, to ensure democratized access to these systems, low cost, interoperability, and ease of use are essential. These challenges were addressed in the design, development and validation of the NeuroExo BCI System. As a proof of concept, the system was tested with an exoskeleton system for upper-limb stroke rehabilitation as the end effector.more » « less
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Objective: We designed and validated a wireless, low-cost, easy-to-use, mobile, dry-electrode headset for scalp electroencephalography (EEG) recordings for closed-loop brain–computer (BCI) interface and internet-of-things (IoT) applications. Approach: The EEG-based BCI headset was designed from commercial off-the-shelf (COTS) components using a multi-pronged approach that balanced interoperability, cost, portability, usability, form factor, reliability, and closed-loop operation. Main Results: The adjustable headset was designed to accommodate 90% of the population. A patent-pending self-positioning dry electrode bracket allowed for vertical self-positioning while parting the user’s hair to ensure contact of the electrode with the scalp. In the current prototype, five EEG electrodes were incorporated in the electrode bracket spanning the sensorimotor cortices bilaterally, and three skin sensors were included to measure eye movement and blinks. An inertial measurement unit (IMU) provides monitoring of head movements. The EEG amplifier operates with 24-bit resolution up to 500 Hz sampling frequency and can communicate with other devices using 802.11 b/g/n WiFi. It has high signal–to–noise ratio (SNR) and common–mode rejection ratio (CMRR) (121 dB and 110 dB, respectively) and low input noise. In closed-loop BCI mode, the system can operate at 40 Hz, including real-time adaptive noise cancellation and 512 MB of processor memory. It supports LabVIEW as a backend coding language and JavaScript (JS), Cascading Style Sheets (CSS), and HyperText Markup Language (HTML) as front-end coding languages and includes training and optimization of support vector machine (SVM) neural classifiers. Extensive bench testing supports the technical specifications and human-subject pilot testing of a closed-loop BCI application to support upper-limb rehabilitation and provides proof-of-concept validation for the device’s use at both the clinic and at home. Significance: The usability, interoperability, portability, reliability, and programmability of the proposed wireless closed-loop BCI system provides a low-cost solution for BCI and neurorehabilitation research and IoT applications.more » « less
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