Artigo Revisado por pares

The effect of monitor raster latency on VEPs, ERPs and Brain–Computer Interface performance

2017; Elsevier BV; Volume: 295; Linguagem: Inglês

10.1016/j.jneumeth.2017.11.018

ISSN

1872-678X

Autores

Sebastian Nagel, Werner Dreher, Wolfgang Rosenstiel, Martin Spüler,

Tópico(s)

Neural and Behavioral Psychology Studies

Resumo

Visual neuroscience experiments and Brain-Computer Interface (BCI) control often require strict timings in a millisecond scale. As most experiments are performed using a personal computer (PC), the latencies that are introduced by the setup should be taken into account and be corrected. As a standard computer monitor uses a rastering to update each line of the image sequentially, this causes a monitor raster latency which depends on the position, on the monitor and the refresh rate.We technically measured the raster latencies of different monitors and present the effects on visual evoked potentials (VEPs) and event-related potentials (ERPs). Additionally we present a method for correcting the monitor raster latency and analyzed the performance difference of a code-modulated VEP BCI speller by correcting the latency.There are currently no other methods validating the effects of monitor raster latency on VEPs and ERPs.The timings of VEPs and ERPs are directly affected by the raster latency. Furthermore, correcting the raster latency resulted in a significant reduction of the target prediction error from 7.98% to 4.61% and also in a more reliable classification of targets by significantly increasing the distance between the most probable and the second most probable target by 18.23%.The monitor raster latency affects the timings of VEPs and ERPs, and correcting resulted in a significant error reduction of 42.23%. It is recommend to correct the raster latency for an increased BCI performance and methodical correctness.

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