Dear friends/colleagues,
I am involved in organizing the following workshop and would like to encourage you to submit an abstract for oral presentation. Please let me know if you have any question.
Best regards,
Ali Bahramisharif
Call for abstracts: SAN 2011 workshop “Gaze-independent brain-computer interfaces”
Abstract deadline: Sunday, 20th of March 2011.
All accepted abstracts will be published in Neuroscience Letters.
Society of Applied Neurosciences
5-8 May 2011
Thessaloniki, Greece
http://www.san2011.org/
You are cordially invited to make a contribution to the workshop entitled “Gaze-independent brain-computer interfaces”, held on May 7 at the SAN 2011 conference.
The principal aim of research into brain-computer interfaces (BCIs) is to restore motor ability and communication in patients suffering from loss of voluntary muscle control. The fostering of BCI research in the past decade has lead to substantial progress at different strands of BCI research and it has lead to the exploitation of new experimental paradigms, advances in signal processing and classification techniques, and the succesful implementation of BCIs in patients' environments.
Recently, the issue of gaze (in)dependence of BCI systems is receiving growing attention in the BCI community. Independence of eye gaze and other muscle-based input signals is a crucial instrument for establishing a unique niche for BCIs in neurorehabilitation research, beyond conventional assistive technologies that rely on muscle-based physiological signals (such as eye movements and EMG). The goal of the present workshop is to bring together different strands of research addressing the (in)dependence of BCIs of eye gaze and other muscle-based physiological signals, and the robustification of present-day BCIs by advances in machine learning and signal processing. To this end, we welcome empirical, theoretical, and methodological accounts on the following topics:
* Machine learning and signal processing for BCI
* BCIs independent of eye gaze
* BCIs based on non-visual (eg, tactile, auditory) sensory modalities
* Integration of multiple sensory modalities
* Innovative BCI paradigms
* Comparative studies comparing BCIs with conventional assistive technology (eg, eyetrackers)
* Evaluation of existing BCIs in clinical studies
* Neurophysiological basis of gaze-independent BCIs
* BCI switches
To contribute, please follow the instructions for oral submissions on the SAN homepage (http://www.san2011.org/) and prepend 'BCI symposium: ' to the title of your abstract.
Looking forward to meeting you in Thessaloniki!
The Organization committee
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