Difference between revisions of "Reproduction of an algorithm for the recognition of error potentials"

From AIRWiki
Jump to: navigation, search
(New page: == '''Part 1: project profile''' == === Project name === Reproduction of an algorithm for the recognition of error potentials === Project short description === Error potentials (ErrPs) a...)
 
Line 13: Line 13:
 
End date: 2009/09
 
End date: 2009/09
  
=== Website(s) ===
 
No Website
 
  
 
=== People involved ===
 
=== People involved ===
Line 30: Line 28:
  
 
[[User:BernardoDalSeno]]
 
[[User:BernardoDalSeno]]
 
===== Other Politecnico di Milano people =====
 
 
  
 
===== Students currently working on the project =====
 
===== Students currently working on the project =====
  
 
[[User:AlfredoMotta]]
 
[[User:AlfredoMotta]]
 
===== Students who worked on the project in the past =====
 
 
 
===== External personnel: =====
 
 
 
=== Laboratory work and risk analysis ===
 
 
No Laboratory work. Just MatLab implementation.
 
  
  

Revision as of 23:17, 1 August 2009

Part 1: project profile

Project name

Reproduction of an algorithm for the recognition of error potentials

Project short description

Error potentials (ErrPs) are event-related potentials present in the EEG (electroencephalogram) when a subject makes a mistake or when the machine a subject is interacting with works in an expected way. They could be used in the BCI field to improve the performance of a BCI by automatically detecting classification errors. The project aims at reproducing algorithms for ErrP detection from the literature.

Dates

Start date: 2009/07

End date: 2009/09


People involved

User:AlfredoMotta

User:AndreaBonarini

User:MatteoMatteucci

User:BernardoDalSeno

Project head(s)

User:MatteoMatteucci

User:BernardoDalSeno

Students currently working on the project

User:AlfredoMotta


Part 2: project description

MatLab implementation of the following algorithms.

P.W. Ferrez, J. Millán. You Are Wrong! Automatic Detection of Interaction Errors from Brain Waves

G. Schalk et al. EEG-based communication: presence of an error potential