IEEE Transactions on Neural Systems and Rehabilitation Engineering (Jan 2022)

Toward Assessment of Sound Localization in Disorders of Consciousness Using a Hybrid Audiovisual Brain–Computer Interface

  • Jun Xiao,
  • Yanbin He,
  • Tianyou Yu,
  • Jiahui Pan,
  • Qiuyou Xie,
  • Caiyun Cao,
  • Heyi Zheng,
  • Weitian Huang,
  • Zhenghui Gu,
  • Zhuliang Yu,
  • Yuanqing Li

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1109/TNSRE.2022.3176354
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 30
pp. 1422 – 1432

Abstract

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Behavioral assessment of sound localization in the Coma Recovery Scale-Revised (CRS-R) poses a significant challenge due to motor disability in patients with disorders of consciousness (DOC). Brain-computer interfaces (BCIs), which can directly detect brain activities related to external stimuli, may thus provide an approach to assess DOC patients without the need for any physical behavior. In this study, a novel audiovisual BCI system was developed to simulate sound localization evaluation in CRS-R. Specifically, there were two alternatively flashed buttons on the left and right sides of the graphical user interface, one of which was randomly chosen as the target. The auditory stimuli of bell sounds were simultaneously presented by the ipsilateral loudspeaker during the flashing of the target button, which prompted patients to selectively attend to the target button. The recorded electroencephalography data were analyzed in real time to detect event-related potentials evoked by the target and further to determine whether the target was attended to or not. A significant BCI accuracy for a patient implied that he/she had sound localization. Among eighteen patients, eleven and four showed sound localization in the BCI and CRS-R, respectively. Furthermore, all patients showing sound localization in the CRS-R were among those detected by our BCI. The other seven patients who had no sound localization behavior in CRS-R were identified by the BCI assessment, and three of them showed improvements in the second CRS-R assessment after the BCI experiment. Thus, the proposed BCI system is promising for assisting the assessment of sound localization and improving the clinical diagnosis of DOC patients.

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