The brain-computer interface (BCI) has been investigated as a form of communication tool between the brain and external devices. BCIs have been extended beyond communication and control over the years. The 2020 international BCI competition aimed to provide high-quality neuroscientific data for open access that could be used to evaluate the current degree of technical advances in BCI. Although there are a variety of remaining challenges for future BCI advances, we discuss some of more recent application directions: (i) few-shot EEG learning, (ii) micro-sleep detection (iii) imagined speech decoding, (iv) cross-session classification, and (v) EEG(+ear-EEG) detection in an ambulatory environment. Not only did scientists from the BCI field compete, but scholars with a broad variety of backgrounds and nationalities participated in the competition to address these challenges. Each dataset was prepared and separated into three data that were released to the competitors in the form of training and validation sets followed by a test set. Remarkable BCI advances were identified through the 2020 competition and indicated some trends of interest to BCI researchers.
The patient must be given an adequate amount of propofol for safe surgery since overcapacity and low capacity cause accidents. However, the sensitivity of propofol varies from patient to patient, making it very difficult to determine the propofol requirements for anesthesia. This paper aims to propose a neurophysiological predictor of propofol requirements based on the preoperative electroencephalogram (EEG). We exploited the canonical correlation analysis that infers the amount of information on the propofol requirements. The results showed that the preoperative EEG included the factor that could explain the propofol requirements. Specifically, the frontal and posterior regions had crucial information on the propofol requirements. Moreover, there was a significantly different power in the frontal and posterior regions between baseline and unconsciousness periods, unlike the alpha power in the central region. These findings showed the potential that preoperative EEG could predict the propofol requirements.
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