Abstract

Early neurological injury or disease can lead to severe life-long physical impairments, despite normal cognitive function. For such individuals, brain-computer interfaces (BCI) may provide a means to regain access to the world by offering control of systems through directly processing brain patterns. However, current BCI applications are often research driven and consequently seen as uninteresting, particularly for prolonged use and younger BCI-users. To help mitigate this concern, this paper establishes a tool for researchers and game developers alike to rapidly incorporate a BCI control scheme (the P300 oddball response) into a gaming environment. Preliminary results indicate the proposed P300 Dynamic Cube (PDC) asset works in online BCI environments (n=20, healthy adult participants), resulting in median classification accuracy of 75 ± 3.28%. Additionally, the PDC tool can be rapidly adapted for a variety of game designs, evidenced by its incorporation into submissions to the Brain-Computer Interface (BCI) Game Jam 2019 competition. These findings support the PDC as a useful asset in the design and development of BCI-based games.

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