Leeb, RobertCarlson, TomPerdikis, SerafeimTonin, LucaBiasiucci, AndreaMolina, AlbertoCreatura, MarcoHoogerwerf, Evert-JanRupp, RüdigerAl-Khodairy, AbdulMillán, José del R.2013-04-262013-04-262013-04-26201310.3217/978-3-85125-260-6-6https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/91810The goal of our research is to enable various end-users to control applications by using a brain-computer interface (BCI). Since applications–like telepresence robots, wheelchairs or text entry systems–are quite demanding a good level of BCI control is needed. However, little is known on how much training is needed to achieve such a level. A second open issue is, if this can be done at rehabilitation clinics or user-centers, without BCI experts present? In this work we wanted to train BCI-naïve end-users within 10 days to successfully control such applications and present results of 23 severely motor-disabled participants.Transferring BCI skills to successful application controlstext::conference output::conference proceedings::conference paper