Novel BCI paradigm for ALS patients based on EEG and Pupillary Accommodative Response
Davide D'Adamo, Emiliano Robert, Cristina Gena, Silvestro Roatta

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel multimodal BCI paradigm combining EEG and pupillary response to improve communication for ALS patients, especially during disease progression to CLIS, by using adaptive neurofeedback training.
Contribution
It presents the first integration of EEG with pupillary accommodative response in a BCI system, enhancing adaptability and reliability for ALS patients transitioning to complete locked-in syndrome.
Findings
Proposes a multimodal BCI combining EEG and PAR signals.
Introduces an adaptive neurofeedback training program.
Aims to support ALS patients through disease progression.
Abstract
Brain-computer interfaces (BCIs) are one of the few alternatives to enable locked-in syndrome (LIS) patients to communicate with the external world, while they are the only solution for complete locked-in syndrome (CLIS) patients, who lost the ability to control eye movements. However, successful usage of endogenous electroencephalogram(EEG)-based BCI applications is often not trivial, due to EEG variations between and within sessions and long user training required. In this work we suggest an approach to deal with this two main limitations of EEG-BCIs by inserting a progressive and expandable neurofeedback training program, able to continuously tailor the classifier to the specific user, into a multimodal BCI paradigm. We propose indeed the integration of EEG with a non-brain signal: the pupillary accommodative response (PAR). The PAR is a change in pupil size associated with gaze…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsEEG and Brain-Computer Interfaces · Gaze Tracking and Assistive Technology · Neurological disorders and treatments
