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  4. Non-Invasive Brain-Actuated Control of a Mobile Robot
 
conference paper

Non-Invasive Brain-Actuated Control of a Mobile Robot

Millán, José del R.  
•
Renkens, Frédéric
•
Mouriño, Josep
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2003
Proceedings of the 18th International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence
IJCAI-03

Recent experiments have shown the near possibility to use the brain electrical activity to directly control the movement of robotics or prosthetic devices. In this paper we report results with a portable non-invasive brain-computer interface that makes possible the continuous control of a mobile robot in a house-like environment. The interface uses 8 surface electrodes to measure electroencephalogram (EEG) signals from which a statistical classifier recognizes 3 different mental states. Until now, brain-actuated control of robots has relied on invasive approaches-requiring surgical implantation of electrodes-since EEG-based systems have been considered too slow for controlling rapid and complex sequences of movements. Here we show that, after a few days of training, two human subjects successfully moved a robot between several rooms by mental control only. Furthermore, mental control was only marginally worse than manual control on the same task.

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