Abstract

The brain-computer interfaces (BCIs) facilitate the users to exploit information encoded in neural signals, specifically electroencephalogram (EEG), to control devices and for neural rehabilitation. Mental imagery (MI)-driven BCI predicts the user's pre-meditated mental objectives, which could be deployed as command signals. This paper presents a novel learning-based framework for classifying MI tasks using EEG-based BCI. In particular, our work focuses on the variation in inter-session data and the extraction of multi-spectral user-tailored features for robust performance. Thus, the goal is to create a calibration-free subject-adaptive learning framework for various mental imagery tasks not restricted to motor imagery alone. In this regard, critical spectral bands and the best temporal window are first selected from the EEG training trials of the subject based on the Riemannian user learning distance metric (Dscore) that checks for distinct and stable patterns. The filtered covariance matrices of the EEG trials in each spectral band are then transformed towards a reference covariance matrix using the Riemannian transfer learning, enabling the different sessions to be comparable. The evaluation of our proposed Selective Time-window and Multi-scale Filter-Bank with Adaptive Riemannian (STFB-AR) features on four public datasets, including disabled subjects, showed around 15% and 8% improvement in mean accuracy over baseline and fixed filter-bank models, respectively.

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