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E-raamat: Brain-computer Interfaces: Principles and Practice [Oxford Scholarship Online e-raamatud]

Edited by (PhD, Wadsworth Center, New York State Department of Health and State Universi), Edited by (MD, Chief, Laboratory of Nervous System Disorders, Wadsworth Center, New York State Department of Health and State University of New York, Albany, NY, USA)
  • Formaat: 424 pages, 181 illustrations
  • Ilmumisaeg: 20-Apr-2012
  • Kirjastus: Oxford University Press Inc
  • ISBN-13: 9780195388855
  • Oxford Scholarship Online e-raamatud
  • Raamatu hind pole hetkel teada
  • Formaat: 424 pages, 181 illustrations
  • Ilmumisaeg: 20-Apr-2012
  • Kirjastus: Oxford University Press Inc
  • ISBN-13: 9780195388855
In the last 15 years, a recognizable surge in the field of Brain Computer Interface (BCI) research and development has emerged. This emergence has sprung from a variety of factors. For one, inexpensive computer hardware and software is now available and can support the complex high-speed analyses of brain activity that is essential is BCI. Another factor is the greater understanding of the central nervous system including the abundance of new information on the nature and functional correlates of brain signals and improved methods for recording these signals in both the short-term and long-term. And the third, and perhaps most significant factor, is the new recognition of the needs and abilities of people disabled by disorders such as cerebral palsy, spinal cord injury, stroke, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), multiple sclerosis, and muscular dystrophies. The severely disabled are now able to live for many years and even those with severely limited voluntary muscle control can now be given the most basic means of communication and control because of the recent advances in the technology, research, and applications of BCI. This book is intended to provide an introduction to and summary of essentially all major aspects of BCI research and development. Its goal is to be a comprehensive, balanced, and coordinated presentation of the field's key principles, current practice, and future prospects.

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Commended for PROSE (Biomedicine/Neuroscience) 2012.
Contributors xiii
Chapter Reviewers xvii
PART ONE INTRODUCTION
1 Brain-Computer Interfaces: Something New Under The Sun
3(12)
Jonathan R. Wolpaw
Elizabeth Winter Wolpaw
PART TWO BRAIN SIGNALS FOR BCIs
2 Neuronal Activity In Motor Cortex And Related Areas
15(30)
Lee E. Miller
Nicholas Hatsopoulos
3 Electric And Magnetic Fields Produced By The Brain
45(20)
Paul L. Nunez
4 Signals Reflecting Brain Metabolic Activity
65(16)
Nick F. Ramsey
PART THREE BCI DESIGN, IMPLEMENTATION, AND OPERATION
5 Acquiring Brain Signals From Within The Brain
81(24)
Kevin J. Otto
Kip A. Ludwig
Daryl R. Kipke
6 Acquiring Brain Signals From Outside The Brain
105(18)
Ramesh Srinivasan
7 Bci Signal Processing: Feature Extraction
123(24)
Dean J. Krusienski
Dennis J. McFarland
Jose C. Principe
8 Bci Signal Processing: Feature Translation
147(18)
Dennis J. McFarland
Dean J. Krusienski
9 Bci Hardware And Software
165(24)
J. Adam Wilson
Christoph Guger
Gerwin Schalk
10 Bci Operating Protocols
189(8)
Steven G. Mason
Brendan Z. Allison
Jonathan R. Wolpaw
11 Bci Applications
197(18)
Jane E. Huggins
Debra Zeitlin
PART FOUR EXISTING BCIs
12 Bcis That Use P300 Event-Related Potentials
215(12)
Eric W. Sellers
Yael Arbel
Emanuel Donchin
13 Bcis That Use Sensorimotor Rhythms
227(14)
Gert Pfurtscheller
Dennis J. McFarland
14 Bcis That Use Steady-State Visual Evoked Potentials Or Slow Cortical Potentials
241(10)
Brendan Z. Allison
Josef Faller
Christa Neuper
15 Bcis That Use Electrocorticographic Activity
251(14)
Gerwin Schalk
16 Bcis That Use Signals Recorded In Motor Cortex
265(24)
John P. Donoghue
17 Bcis That Use Signals Recorded In Parietal Or Premotor Cortex
289(12)
Hansjorg Scherberger
18 Bcis That Use Brain Metabolic Signals
301(16)
Ranganatha Sitaram
Sangkyun Lee
Niels Birbaumer
PART FIVE USING BCIs
19 Bci Users And Their Needs
317(8)
Leigh R. Hochberg
Kim D. Anderson
20 Clinical Evaluation Of Bcis
325(12)
Theresa M. Vaughan
Eric W. Sellers
Jonathan R. Wolpaw
21 Dissemination: Getting Bcis To The People Who Need Them
337(14)
Frances J. R. Richmond
Gerald E. Loeb
22 Bci Therapeutic Applications For Improving Brain Function
351(12)
Janis J. Daly
Ranganatha Sitaram
23 Bci Applications For The General Population
363(10)
Benjamin Blankertz
Michael Tangermann
Klaus-Robert Muller
24 Ethical Issues In Bci Research
373(14)
Mary-Jane Schneider
Joseph J. Fins
Jonathan R. Wolpaw
PART SIX CONCLUSION
25 The Future Of Bcis: Meeting The Expectations
387(6)
Jonathan R. Wolpaw
Elizabeth Winter Wolpaw
Index 393
Jonathan Wolpaw, MD, is Chief at the Laboratory of Nervous System Disorders at the Wadsworth Center, New York State Department of Health and State University of New York, Albany, NY.

Elizabeth Winter Wolpaw, PhD is Professor Emeritus in the Department of Chemistry at Siena College in Albany, NY and Research Associate at the Laboratory of Nervous System Disorders at the Wadsworth Center, New York State Department of Health and State University of New York, Albany, NY.