Reliability of NIRS-based BCIs: a placebo-controlled replication and reanalysis of Brainput

2014

Conference: Conference on Human Factors in Computing (CHI), Extended Abstracts

Megan Strait and Cody Canning and Matthias Scheutz

Near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) brain–computer interfaces (BCIs) enable users to interact with their environment using only cognitive activities. This paper presents the results of a comparison of four methodological frameworks used to select a pair of tasks to control a binary NIRS-BCI; specifically, three novel personalized task paradigms and the state-of-the-art prescribed task framework were explored.

@inproceedings{straitetal14altchi,
  title={Reliability of NIRS-based BCIs: a placebo-controlled replication and reanalysis of Brainput},
  author={Megan Strait and Cody Canning and Matthias Scheutz},
  year={2014},
  booktitle={Conference on Human Factors in Computing (CHI), Extended Abstracts},
  url={https://hrilab.tufts.edu/publications/straitetal14altchi.pdf}
  doi={10.1016/j.jneumeth.2015.07.007}
}