Applications of brain-computer interfaces (BCIs) in pediatric rehabilitation are expanding. However, it is unclear whether popular BCI paradigms developed for adults are feasible in children. This study evaluated, in a typically developing pediatric sample, a time-honored, adult, motor imagery BCI paradigm that discriminates between imagined left- and right-hand movements. Methods: We developed an electroencephalographic pediatric BCI with visual- auditory feedback through a game interface controlled by left- and right-hand motor imagery (MI). The BCI was evaluated in one offline (with sham feedback) and four online (with real-time classifier feedback) sessions with 11 typically developing children aged 9–14 years. The BCI was personalized to each child, via a well-established adult pipeline, namely, a regularized linear discriminant classifier with selected common spatial patterns in mu and beta bands as inputs. Results: Unlike in adults, the online child-specific BCI demonstrated limited discrimination between left and right-hand MI using spatial features (52 ±9%). Only left-hand MI versus rest in a retrospective analysis with personalized feature sets reached 70 ±3%. Conclusions: Our findings suggest that cortical activity corresponding to MI in our pediatric sample departed from well-documented, conspicuously lateralized adult patterns. Further investigation of developmental MI patterns is warranted to identify a pediatric approach to MI BCI.
Catherine House, S., Orlandi, S., Chau, T. (2024). Limited value of a common spatial patterns approach to online discrimination of left- and right-hand motor imagery in a pediatric sample. BRAIN-APPARATUS COMMUNICATION, 3(1), 1-20 [10.1080/27706710.2024.2425299].
Limited value of a common spatial patterns approach to online discrimination of left- and right-hand motor imagery in a pediatric sample
Silvia OrlandiSecondo
Writing – Original Draft Preparation
;
2024
Abstract
Applications of brain-computer interfaces (BCIs) in pediatric rehabilitation are expanding. However, it is unclear whether popular BCI paradigms developed for adults are feasible in children. This study evaluated, in a typically developing pediatric sample, a time-honored, adult, motor imagery BCI paradigm that discriminates between imagined left- and right-hand movements. Methods: We developed an electroencephalographic pediatric BCI with visual- auditory feedback through a game interface controlled by left- and right-hand motor imagery (MI). The BCI was evaluated in one offline (with sham feedback) and four online (with real-time classifier feedback) sessions with 11 typically developing children aged 9–14 years. The BCI was personalized to each child, via a well-established adult pipeline, namely, a regularized linear discriminant classifier with selected common spatial patterns in mu and beta bands as inputs. Results: Unlike in adults, the online child-specific BCI demonstrated limited discrimination between left and right-hand MI using spatial features (52 ±9%). Only left-hand MI versus rest in a retrospective analysis with personalized feature sets reached 70 ±3%. Conclusions: Our findings suggest that cortical activity corresponding to MI in our pediatric sample departed from well-documented, conspicuously lateralized adult patterns. Further investigation of developmental MI patterns is warranted to identify a pediatric approach to MI BCI.| File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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Limited value of a common spatial patterns approach to online discrimination of left- and right-hand motor imagery in a pediatric sample-2.pdf
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