2020 Volume 140 Issue 7 Pages 711-717
Brain-computer interface enables people who cannnot move their own body freely to manipulate machines and helps their communication and life. Recent BCI uses multimodal stimuli to increase bit rate of the system, so it is important to reveal when and which part of the brain part is activated to discriminate target stimuli. Though magnetoencephalography measures brain activity with high spatial and temporal resolution, there is a few index to estimate spatiotemporal locality of response. We propose an index to estimate spatiotemporal locality of response to multimodal stimuli of oddball paradigm from magnetoencephalography (MEG) signals. The validity of proposed index is demonstrated by simulation. Discrimination task was conducted with different ratio of target/non-target stimuli with visual and auditory location. Response to visual target stimuli were strong and made no spatiotemporal defference, so visual dominance was implied.
The transactions of the Institute of Electrical Engineers of Japan.C
The Journal of the Institute of Electrical Engineers of Japan