Decoding Single-Hand and Both-Hand Movement Directions from Noninvasive Neural Signals

Jiarong Wang, Luzheng Bi*, Weijie Fei, Cuntai Guan

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

28 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Decoding human movement parameters from electroencephalograms (EEG) signals is of great value for human-machine collaboration. However, existing studies on hand movement direction decoding concentrate on the decoding of a single-hand movement direction from EEG signals given the opposite hand is maintained still. In practice, the cooperative movement of both hands is common. In this paper, we investigated the neural signatures and decoding of single-hand and both-hand movement directions from EEG signals. The potentials of EEG signals and power sums in the low frequency band of EEG signals from 24 channels were used as decoding features. The linear discriminant analysis (LDA) and support vector machine (SVM) classifiers were used for decoding. Experimental results showed a significant difference in the negative offset maximums of movement-related cortical potentials (MRCPs) at electrode Cz between single-hand and both-hand movements. The recognition accuracies for six-class classification, including two single-hand and four both-hand movement directions, reached 70.29%± 10.85% by using EEG potentials as features with the SVM classifier. These findings showed the feasibility of decoding single-hand and both-hand movement directions. This work can lay a foundation for the future development of an active human-machine collaboration system based on EEG signals and open a new research direction in the field of decoding hand movement parameters from EEG signals.

Original languageEnglish
Article number9241058
Pages (from-to)1932-1940
Number of pages9
JournalIEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering
Volume68
Issue number6
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jun 2021

Keywords

  • Both-hand movement
  • EEG
  • brain-computer interface
  • hand movement decoding
  • movement-related cortical potential
  • neural signature

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