OBJECTIVE Event Related Potentials (ERPs) reflecting cognitive response to external stimuli, are widely used in Brain Computer Interfaces (BCI). ERPs are characterized and typically decoded through a fixed set of… Click to show full abstract
OBJECTIVE Event Related Potentials (ERPs) reflecting cognitive response to external stimuli, are widely used in Brain Computer Interfaces (BCI). ERPs are characterized and typically decoded through a fixed set of components with particular amplitude and latency. However, the classical methods which rely on waveform features achieve a high decoding performance only with standardized and well aligned single trials. Since the amplitude and latency are sensitive to the experimental conditions, waveform features cannot be successfully applied for challenging tasks or to generalize across various experimental protocols. Features based on spatial covariances across channels can potentially overcome the latency jitter and delays since they aggregate the information across time. APPROACH We compared the performance stability of waveform and covariance-based features as well as their combination in simulated scenarios. We investigate two cases: 1) classifier transfer between 3 experiments with Error Related Potentials and 2) the performance robustness to the added latency jitter. MAIN RESULTS The features based on spatial covariances provide a stable performance with a minor decline under jitter levels of up to ± 300 ms, whereas the decoding performance with waveform features quickly drops from 0.85 to 0.55 AUC. The classifier transfer also resulted in a significantly more stable performance with covariance-based features. SIGNIFICANCE Our findings suggest that covariance-based features can be used to: 1) classify more reliably ERPs with higher intrinsic variability in more challenging real-life applications and 2) generalize across related experimental protocols.
               
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