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Can the BCI Design Be Implemented in a Form Suitable for Long-Term Independent Use? Can the BCI Design Be Implemented in a Form Suitable for Long-Term Independent Use?
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Who Are the People Who Need the BCI, and Can They Use It? Who Are the People Who Need the BCI, and Can They Use It?
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Defining the Population of Prospective BCI Home Users Defining the Population of Prospective BCI Home Users
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Recruiting Participants for BCI Home-User Studies Recruiting Participants for BCI Home-User Studies
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Obtaining Informed Consent Obtaining Informed Consent
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Determining Whether a Potential Study Subject Can Use the BCI Determining Whether a Potential Study Subject Can Use the BCI
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Can the Home Environment Support BCI Use, and Is the BCI Actually Used? Can the Home Environment Support BCI Use, and Is the BCI Actually Used?
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Assessing the Environment and the Caregivers Assessing the Environment and the Caregivers
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Initiating and Evaluating BCI Home Use Initiating and Evaluating BCI Home Use
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Configuring the BCI for the User Configuring the BCI for the User
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Placing the BCI in the Home Placing the BCI in the Home
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Ensuring Safety and Comfort Ensuring Safety and Comfort
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Training the User and the Caregivers Training the User and the Caregivers
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Providing Ongoing Technical Support as Needed Providing Ongoing Technical Support as Needed
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Measuring the Extent, Nature, and Success of BCI Use Measuring the Extent, Nature, and Success of BCI Use
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Does the BCI Improve the User’s Life? Does the BCI Improve the User’s Life?
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Difficult Challenges in BCI Translational Studies Difficult Challenges in BCI Translational Studies
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Future Improvements that Will Promote BCI Clinical Translation Future Improvements that Will Promote BCI Clinical Translation
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Summary Summary
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References References
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20 Clinical Evaluation of BCIs
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Published:January 2012
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Abstract
This chapter addresses the following questions: Can the brain-computer interface (BCI) design be implemented in a form suitable for long-term independent use? Who are the people who need the BCI system, and can they use it? Can their home environments support their use of the BCI, and do they actually use it? Does the BCI improve their lives? It considers the steps involved in answering each of these questions and the potential problems that must be overcome. Since the present peer-reviewed literature lacks any formal multisubject studies that address these questions, the discussion relies heavily on personal experience to date, which is primarily with a noninvasive EEG P300-based BCI system. The chapter's overall intent is to provide information and insight that would apply to any effort to take any BCI system out of the lab and validate its effectiveness in the everyday lives of people with disabilities.
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