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Imagerie motrice BCI×Modèle Spatial Commun×Analyse des synergies musculaires×
DomaineBiomécaniqueBiomécaniqueBiomécanique
FamilleProcess / pipelineProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Année d'origine199920001999
Auteur d'origineGert PfurtschellerHerbert RamoserMarc Tresch
TypeNeural signal processing and decoding pipelineSpatial filtering and feature extractionDimensionality reduction and pattern extraction
Source fondatricePfurtscheller, G., & Neuper, C. (1999). Motor imagery and direct brain-computer communication. Proceedings of the IEEE, 89(7), 1123-1134. link ↗Ramoser, H., Mueller-Gerking, J., & Pfurtscheller, G. (2000). Optimal spatial filtering of single trial EEG during imagined hand movement. IEEE Transactions on Rehabilitation Engineering, 8(4), 441-446. DOI ↗Tresch, M. C., Saltiel, P., Bizzi, E., & Bizzi, E. (1999). The construction of movement by the spinal cord. Nature Neuroscience, 2(2), 162-167. DOI ↗
AliasMotor imagery BCI, MI-BCI, EEG motor decodingCSP, Spatial filtering, CSP decompositionMotor synergy, Synergy extraction, Motor primitives
Apparentées333
RésuméBrain-computer interface (BCI) using motor imagery decodes the intent to move from brain activity (typically EEG) recorded while subjects imagine movement without actual muscle contraction. Pioneered by Gert Pfurtscheller and colleagues, motor imagery BCIs enable communication and control for paralyzed patients and enhance motor learning in rehabilitation.Common Spatial Pattern (CSP) is a spatial filtering technique that identifies electrode combinations that maximize the variance difference between two classes of EEG activity, typically used in brain-computer interfaces to enhance motor imagery discrimination. Introduced by Ramoser and colleagues in 2000, CSP has become a standard feature extraction method in BCI research.Muscle synergy analysis decomposes complex motor behavior into a small set of coactivated muscle groups (synergies or motor primitives). Pioneered by Marc Tresch and colleagues studying frog motor control, this approach reveals how the nervous system simplifies the control of many muscles by organizing them into task-relevant combinations.
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ScholarGateComparer des méthodes: BCI Motor Imagery · Common Spatial Pattern · Muscle Synergy Analysis. Consulté le 2026-06-19 sur https://scholargate.app/fr/compare