Major

Biomedical Engineering

Anticipated Graduation Year

2022

Access Type

Open Access

Abstract

Brain-computer interface (BCI) has been developed for the purpose of bypassing the spinal cord and peripheral nervous system to communicate or control a remote device. Prospective designs have claimed to be able to assist people with severe disabilities or apply to the practice of neurorehabilitation. Nonetheless, due to the complicated and unpredictable nature of such systems, the feasibility and reliability of available BCIs remain to be fully explored. We aim to apply system identification techniques for black-box modeling, attempting to find the most appropriate BCI system model.

Faculty Mentors & Instructors

Dr. Vincent Chen, Biomedical Engineering Professor, Engineering Department

Creative Commons License

Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 License.

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System Modeling of Brain-Neuromuscular Functions for Developing Brain Computer Interface

Brain-computer interface (BCI) has been developed for the purpose of bypassing the spinal cord and peripheral nervous system to communicate or control a remote device. Prospective designs have claimed to be able to assist people with severe disabilities or apply to the practice of neurorehabilitation. Nonetheless, due to the complicated and unpredictable nature of such systems, the feasibility and reliability of available BCIs remain to be fully explored. We aim to apply system identification techniques for black-box modeling, attempting to find the most appropriate BCI system model.