Recent technological advancements have opened invaluable opportunities for assisting people who are experiencing impairments or disabilities. For instance, they have enabled the creation of tools to ...
Brain-computer interfaces (BCIs) have the potential to make life easier for people with motor or speech disorders, allowing them to manipulate prosthetic limbs and employ computers, among other uses.
Imagine sitting in a packed restaurant, straining to hear the person across the table while every other conversation, every clattering plate, floods in at the same volume. For roughly 30 million ...
Auditory brain–computer interfaces (BCIs) based on non-invasive electrodes offer significant potential for advancing the understanding of selective auditory attention mechanisms and enabling natural ...
Recent advances in non-invasive technologies have shown disruptive potential for biomedical applications. However, while surgically non-invasive, they may introduce other types of limitations which ...