Brain-Machine Interfaces: From Basic Science to Neuroprostheses and Neurorehabilitation
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Abstract
Brain-machine interfaces (BMIs) combine methods, approaches, and concepts derived from neurophysiology, computer science, and engineering in an effort to establish real-time bidirectional links between living brains and artificial actuators. Although theoretical propositions and some proof of concept experiments on directly linking the brains with machines date back to the early 1960s, BMI research only took off in earnest at the end of the 1990s, when this approach became intimately linked to new neurophysiological methods for sampling large-scale brain activity. The classic goals of BMIs are 1) to unveil and utilize principles of operation and plastic properties of the distributed and dynamic circuits of the…
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Topics
Keywords
- Neurorehabilitation
- Neuroprosthetics
- Brain–computer interface
- Neural engineering
- Computer science
- Neurophysiology
- Neuroscience
- Human–computer interaction
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