publications([{ "lang": "en", "publisher": "Springer", "doi": "http://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-22701-6_37", "title": "Towards Brain Computer Interfaces for Recreational Activities: Piloting a Drone", "abstract": "Active Brain Computer Interfaces (BCIs) allow people to exert voluntary control over a computer system: brain signals are captured and imagined actions (movements, concepts) are recognized after a training phase (from 10 minutes to 2 months). BCIs are confined in labs, with only a few dozen people using them outside regularly (e.g. assistance for impairments). We propose a “Co-learning BCI” (CLBCI) that reduces the amount of training and makes BCIs more suitable for recreational applications. We replicate an existing experiment where the BCI controls a drone and compare CLBCI to their Operant Conditioning (OC) protocol over three durations of practice (1 day, 1 week, 1 month). We find that OC works at 80% after a month practice, but the performance is between 60 and 70% any earlier. In a week of practice, CLBCI reaches a performance of around 75%. We conclude that CLBCI is better suited for recreational use. OC should be reserved for users for whom performance is the main concern.", "authors": { "1": { "first_name": "Nataliya", "last_name": "Kos'myna" }, "2": { "first_name": "Franck", "last_name": "Tarpin-Bernard" }, "3": { "first_name": "Bertrand", "last_name": "Rivet" } }, "year": 2015, "uri": "http://iihm.imag.fr/publication/KTR15b/", "pages": "506-522", "bibtype": "inproceedings", "id": 726, "abbr": "KTR15b", "address": "Bamberg, Germany", "date": "2015-09-15", "type": "Conférences internationales de large diffusion avec comité de lecture sur texte complet", "booktitle": "Proceedings of the 15th IFIP TC13 Conference on Human-Computer Interaction (INTERACT'15)", "type_publi": "icolcomlec" }]);