Beyond Flickering: Introducing Code-Modulated Motion Visual Evoked Potentials for Brain-Computer Interfacing
Hanneke Scheppink, Rainer Herpers, Jordy Thielen, Ivan Volosyak

TL;DR
This study introduces code-modulated motion visual evoked potentials (c-MVEP) as a new motion-based stimulation paradigm for brain-computer interfaces, demonstrating comparable performance to flicker-based methods and highlighting its potential as an alternative approach.
Contribution
The paper presents the novel c-MVEP paradigm using motion stimulation for BCI, with experimental validation showing its effectiveness and potential advantages over traditional flicker-based methods.
Findings
c-MVEP shows similar time and frequency domain characteristics as c-VEP.
c-MVEP achieves an online BCI accuracy of 85.67%.
c-MVEP has a lower average selection time than SSMVEP.
Abstract
A code-modulated motion visual evoked potential (c-MVEP) for brain-computer interfacing (BCI) is presented in this study. This paradigm uses pseudo-random sequences to visually stimulate objects using motion as an alternative to flickering. In an offline experiment of this study, EEG data were recorded and compared during sequential stimulation of a single object under four conditions: c-MVEP, code-modulated visual evoked potential (c-VEP), steady-state motion visual evoked potential (SSMVEP), and steady-state visual evoked potential (SSVEP). c-MVEP showed similar time-domain characteristics as c-VEP, and also in the frequency domain c-MVEP evoked a broadband response similar to c-VEP, with a comparable signal-to-noise ratio (SNR), albeit more focused in the lower frequency range. Both SSMVEP and SSVEP showed clear oscillatory responses at the stimulation frequency and harmonics, with a…
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.
