Electrotactile BCI for Top-Down Somatosensory Training: Clinical Feasibility Trial of Online BCI Control in Subacute Stroke Patients

Author:

Savić Andrej M.1ORCID,Novičić Marija1,Miler-Jerković Vera2,Djordjević Olivera34ORCID,Konstantinović Ljubica34ORCID

Affiliation:

1. University of Belgrade – School of Electrical Engineering, 11000 Belgrade, Serbia

2. Innovation Center of the School of Electrical Engineering, University of Belgrade, 11000 Belgrade, Serbia

3. University of Belgrade – Faculty of Medicine, 11000 Belgrade, Serbia

4. Clinic for Rehabilitation “Dr Miroslav Zotović”, 11000 Belgrade, Serbia

Abstract

This study investigates the feasibility of a novel brain–computer interface (BCI) device designed for sensory training following stroke. The BCI system administers electrotactile stimuli to the user’s forearm, mirroring classical sensory training interventions. Concurrently, selective attention tasks are employed to modulate electrophysiological brain responses (somatosensory event-related potentials—sERPs), reflecting cortical excitability in related sensorimotor areas. The BCI identifies attention-induced changes in the brain’s reactions to stimulation in an online manner. The study protocol assesses the feasibility of online binary classification of selective attention focus in ten subacute stroke patients. Each experimental session includes a BCI training phase for data collection and classifier training, followed by a BCI test phase to evaluate online classification of selective tactile attention based on sERP. During online classification tests, patients complete 20 repetitions of selective attention tasks with feedback on attention focus recognition. Using a single electroencephalographic channel, attention classification accuracy ranges from 70% to 100% across all patients. The significance of this novel BCI paradigm lies in its ability to quantitatively measure selective tactile attention resources throughout the therapy session, introducing a top-down approach to classical sensory training interventions based on repeated neuromuscular electrical stimulation.

Funder

Science Fund of the Republic of Serbia

Publisher

MDPI AG

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